Dept. of Forestry and Environmental Resources, North Carolina State University, 3041 E. Cornwallis Road, Research Triangle Park, NC, 27709, USA.
University of Helsinki, Viikki, Campus, Room 525, Latokartanonkaari 7, P.O. Box 27, 00014, Helsinki, Finland.
J Environ Manage. 2019 Jun 15;240:421-430. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.03.126. Epub 2019 Apr 5.
Planted forests are a rising share of total forests globally and an increasingly important source of timber product output, affecting national and global markets. We estimated econometric models of planted forest area by OECD and non-OECD country groups that control for economic, institutional and environmental policies likely to influence future changes in planted forest area. The models are then used to project planted forest area over next 55 years for 180 countries under five alternative scenarios of global socio-economic changes, represented in shared socioeconomic pathways (SSPs), adjunct products emerging from the Fifth Assessment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). By embedding key features of the SSP projections into a global forest sector model, we evaluate how planted forests lead to different global forest product market outcomes for each SSP, compared to corresponding outcomes where planted forests are not considered separately. Projected global planted forest area in 2070 ranges from 379 million ha (Mha) for SSP3 (a relatively poor and unequal world) to 475 Mha under SSP5 (a relatively wealthier and more equal world), representing respective increases of 46% and 66% compared to 2015. SSPs with the highest planted forest area increases have the lowest product prices (down by 12% by 2070, compared to SSP5 without planted forests) and higher global forest products production and consumption quantities (by as much as 3.3% by 2070, compared to SSP5 without planted forests). However, production does not increase in all countries by similar amounts, due to changes in relative advantages in production brought about by reduced product prices.
人工林在全球森林中所占的比例不断上升,是木材产品产量的一个越来越重要的来源,影响着国家和全球市场。我们根据经济合作与发展组织(OECD)和非经济合作与发展组织(non-OECD)国家集团控制经济、制度和环境政策的情况,对人工林面积的计量经济模型进行了估计,这些政策可能会影响未来人工林面积的变化。然后,我们使用这些模型在五种不同的全球社会经济变化情景下,对 180 个国家未来 55 年的人工林面积进行预测,这些情景代表了政府间气候变化专门委员会(IPCC)第五次评估报告中出现的共享社会经济途径(SSP)和附加产品。通过将 SSP 预测的关键特征嵌入到全球森林部门模型中,我们评估了在每个 SSP 下,人工林如何导致不同的全球森林产品市场结果,与不单独考虑人工林的情况下的对应结果进行了比较。到 2070 年,预计全球人工林面积在 SSP3(一个相对贫穷和不平等的世界)下为 3.79 亿公顷(Mha),在 SSP5(一个相对富裕和更加平等的世界)下为 4.75 亿公顷,与 2015 年相比,分别增加了 46%和 66%。人工林面积增长最快的 SSP 国家,其产品价格最低(到 2070 年将比 SSP5 不考虑人工林的情况下下降 12%),全球森林产品的产量和消费量也更高(到 2070 年将比 SSP5 不考虑人工林的情况下增加 3.3%)。然而,由于产品价格下降带来的生产相对优势的变化,并非所有国家的产量都以类似的幅度增加。