New Data Highlights Role of Forests in Fight Against Climate Change
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U.S.
forests
offset roughly 11 percent of industrial greenhouse gas emissions
annually
WASHINGTON,
Oct. 15, 2010 - The USDA Forest Service today released new estimates of
the
total carbon storage of U.S. forests, highlighting the important role
America's
forests play in the fight against climate change.
According
to
the new data, 41.4 billion metric tons of carbon is currently stored in
the
nation's forests, and due to both increases in the total area of forest
land
and increases in the carbon stored per acre, an additional 192 million
metric
tons of carbon are sequestered each year. The additional carbon
sequestered
annually offsets roughly 11 percent of the country's industrial
greenhouse gas
emissions, the equivalent of removing almost 135 million passenger
vehicles
from the nation's highways.
"America's forests play a critical role in combating climate change,
collectively capturing and storing significant amounts of carbon that
would
otherwise pollute the atmosphere," said Agriculture Secretary Tom
Vilsack.
"Forest management on all lands can contribute significantly toward
cooling a warming planet, and this new information will assist the
public and
policy makers as we work to address this significant issue."
Among the key findings in this year's report:
On average, the amount of carbon stored in forestland has
increased over the past two decades.
* The
increases
since 1990 are partially driven by an increase in the total area of
forestland,
and partially driven by an increase in the carbon stored per acre.
*
Forest area
can increase by tree planting or encroachment of woody vegetation into
non-forest areas, such as abandoned fields.
*
Carbon stored
per acre can increase with increasing stand age, an increase in stand
density,
or it can decrease due to disturbances, such as fire.
* It
cannot be
determined from these data whether particular management practices are
having
an effect on carbon storage.
National forests contain an average of 77.8 metric tons of carbon
per acre: a greater density than on private (60.7 metric tons of carbon
per
acre) or other public forest lands (68.3 metric
tons of carbon per acre)
*
National
forests contain an average of 28 percent more carbon per forested acre
than
private land. This is due to differing management priorities on
national forest
lands than private lands.
* On
average,
national forests contain 14 percent more carbon per forested acre than
other
public land such as state forests and national parks.
* In
the
Pacific Northwest, however, the average amount of carbon on other
public lands
exceeds the average on national forests by 8 percent, which is
partially driven
by a large concentration of state and federal forests and parks along
the wet
Pacific coast.
Private forestlands store more total carbon than national
forests.
*
Although the
national forests have higher per-acre carbon storage than private
lands,
private forestlands make up a much larger percentage of the nation's
total
forest area (63 percent) than national forests (22 percent; other
public land
is 15 percent of the nation's forest area).
*
Private
forestlands dominate the eastern United States, but national forest
lands make
up a large proportion of forests in the western part of the country.
These
figures exclude interior Alaska.
The average amount of carbon per acre varies regionally and by
type of forest.
* The
wet
temperate conifer forest types growing along the Pacific Coast from
northern
California to southeast Alaska have a high density of large trees. Not
surprisingly, forests in this zone have the highest average carbon per
acre-averaging 92.9 metric tons of carbon per acre across all
ownerships.
* The
arid
forest types of the desert southwest, such as the pinyon-juniper forest
type,
typically have fewer trees per acre and the individual trees tend to be
small.
So forests in this zone have the lowest average carbon per
acre-averaging 30.7
metric tons of carbon per acre across all ownerships.
The amount of carbon in the five key carbon pools
also varies regionally.
*
Forests in
the western United States store a greater proportion of carbon in trees
and
other non-soil pools.
*
Forests in
the Great Lakes region are growing on soils that have large
concentrations of
peat and organic carbon, so a greater proportion of carbon is stored in
the
soils.
"A strong accounting method serves as the crucial first step in
assessing carbon sequestration potential in our nation's forests," said
Ann Bartuska, Deputy Undersecretary for Research, Economics, and
Education, at
USDA. "Today's report reflects a continued emphasis to remain on the
cutting edge of forest carbon research and science."
The new estimates are based on fresh 2010 data from annual forest
inventories that assess carbon storage state by state across the
country's
federal, state and private forests. Researchers analyze tree species,
ages,
forest density, forest area, and numerous other factors in quantifying
carbon
storage. The Forest Services has provided these estimates to the
Environmental
Protection Agency for the past 18 years.
The Forest Service manages 193 million acres of forests and grasslands
across the country, the equivalent of 146 million football fields worth
of
forest. An additional 604 million acres are managed primarily by
private land
owners, with states, local governments, and other federal agencies
managing the
remainder.
Additional information about the report and the carbon process can be
found at: www.fs.fed.us/rmrs/forest-carbon/.
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