Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Introduction
Forest carbon management must be an important element of any international agreement on climate change. Forest carbon flows comprise a significant part of overall global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. While global forests as a whole may be a net sink (Nabours and Masera 2007), global emissions from deforestation contribute between 20 and 25 percent of all GHG emissions (Sedjo and Sohngen 2007, Skutsch et al. 2007). The size of the total global carbon pool in forest vegetation has been estimated at 359 gigatonnes of carbon (GtC), which compares to annual global carbon emissions from industrial sources of approximately 6.3 GtC (IPCC 2000). The potential impact on the global carbon cycle of both natural and anthropogenic changes in forests is enormous.
An effective international forest carbon management regime must not only provide landowners and governments with incentives to protect and expand stocks of carbon, but must induce countries to enroll in the forest agreement in the first place. Ideally, a multilateral forest carbon program would also impose relatively low transaction costs even as it encourages decision makers to seek low-cost opportunities for sequestration.
The current international regime, the Kyoto Protocol, has proven ineffective in this regard. There are three primary problems. First, the Annex I (industrialized) countries are required to include afforestation, reforestation, and deforestation in their national accounting. However, Article 3.3 of the Kyoto Protocol limits that accounting to changes that are “human-induced,” inviting endless arguments about which changes should be included. For example, one can make reasonable arguments both for and against, say, Canada's inclusion of continued northern forest growth as a “human-induced” change in its national carbon account.
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