Krug Joachim H A
Silviculture and Forest Ecology of the Temperate Zones, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Büsgenweg 1, 37077, Göttingen, Germany.
Carbon Balance Manag. 2018 Jan 3;13(1):1. doi: 10.1186/s13021-017-0089-6.
Forests have always played an important role in agreeing on accounting rules during the past two decades of international climate policy development. Starting from activity-based gross-net accounting of selected forestry activities to mandatory accounting against a baseline-rules have changed quite rapidly and with significant consequences for accounted credits and debits. Such changes have direct consequences on incentives for climate-investments in forestry. There have also been strong arguments not to include forests into the accounting system by considering large uncertainties, procedural challenges and a fear of unearned credits corrupting the overall accounting system, among others. This paper reflects the development of respective accounting approaches and reviews the progress made on core challenges and resulting incentives.
The historic development of forest management accounting rules is analysed in the light of the Paris Agreement. Pros and cons of different approaches are discussed with specific focus on the challenge to maintain integrity of the accounting approach and on resulting incentives for additional human induced investments to increase growth for future substitution and increased C storage by forest management. The review is solely based on scientific publications and official IPCC and UNFCC documents. Some rather political statements of non-scientific stakeholders are considered to reflect criticism. Such sources are indicated accordingly. Remaining and emerging requirements for an accounting system for post 2030 are highlighted.
The Paris Agreement is interpreted as a "game changer" for the role of forests in climate change mitigation. Many countries rely on forests in their NDCs to achieve their self-set targets. In fact, the agreement "to achieve a balance between anthropogenic emissions by sources and removals by sinks of greenhouse gases in the second half of this century" puts pressure on the entire land sector to contribute to overall GHG emission reductions. This also concerns forests as a resource for the bio-based economy and wood products, and for increasing carbon reservoirs. By discussing the existing elements of forest accounting rules and conditions for establishing an accounting system post 2030, it is concluded that core requirements like factoring out direct human-induced from indirect human-induced and natural impacts on managed lands, a facilitation of incentives for management changes and providing safeguards for the integrity of the accounting system are not sufficiently secured by currently discussed accounting rules. A responsibility to fulfil these basic requirements is transferred to Nationally Determined Contributions. Increased incentives for additional human induced investments are not stipulated by the accounting approach but rather by the political decision to make use of the substitution effect and potential net removals from LULUCF to contribute to self-set targets.
在过去二十年的国际气候政策发展过程中,森林在商定核算规则方面一直发挥着重要作用。从选定林业活动基于活动的毛额 - 净额核算到基于基线的强制核算,规则变化相当迅速,对核算的贷方和借方产生了重大影响。此类变化对林业气候投资的激励措施有直接影响。也有强烈的观点认为,鉴于存在巨大的不确定性、程序挑战以及担心不应得的信用会破坏整个核算系统等因素,不应将森林纳入核算体系。本文反映了各自核算方法的发展,并回顾了在核心挑战及由此产生的激励措施方面所取得的进展。
根据《巴黎协定》分析了森林管理核算规则的历史发展。讨论了不同方法的优缺点,特别关注维持核算方法完整性的挑战以及对额外人为投资的激励措施,这些投资旨在通过森林管理增加未来替代量的增长并提高碳储量。该综述仅基于科学出版物以及政府间气候变化专门委员会(IPCC)和联合国气候变化框架公约(UNFCC)的官方文件。一些非科学利益相关者的政治性较强的声明也被纳入以反映批评意见。此类来源会相应注明。强调了对2030年后核算体系的剩余和新出现的要求。
《巴黎协定》被视为森林在气候变化缓解中作用的“游戏规则改变者”。许多国家在其国家自主贡献(NDC)中依赖森林来实现自身设定的目标。事实上,“在本世纪下半叶实现人为温室气体排放源与汇的清除之间的平衡”这一协定给整个土地部门带来压力,要求其为总体温室气体减排做出贡献。这也涉及森林作为生物基经济和木制品的资源以及作为增加碳库的作用。通过讨论森林核算规则的现有要素以及2030年后建立核算体系的条件,得出结论:目前讨论的核算规则未能充分确保诸如区分对管理土地的直接人为影响与间接人为影响和自然影响、促进管理变革的激励措施以及为核算体系的完整性提供保障等核心要求。履行这些基本要求的责任被转移到国家自主贡献中。核算方法并未规定对额外人为投资增加激励措施,而是由利用替代效应以及土地利用、土地利用变化和林业(LULUCF)潜在净清除量以实现自身设定目标的政治决定来规定。