Sectoral approaches to improve regional carbon budgets

Humans utilise about 40% of the earth's net primary production (NPP) but the products of this NPP are often managed by different sectors, with timber and forest products managed by the forestry sector and food and fibre products from croplands and grasslands managed by the agricultural sector....

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Main Authors: Smith, Pete, Nabuurs, G.J., Janssens, I.A., Reis, S., Marland, G., Soussana, J.F., Christensen, T.R., Heath, L., Apps, M., Alexeyev, V., Jingyun Fang, Gattuso, J.-P., Guerschman, J.P., Yao Huang, Jobbagy, E., Murdiyarso, Daniel, Jian Ni, Nobre, A., Changhui Peng, Walcroft, A., Shao Qiang Wang, Pan, Y., Guang Sheng Zhou
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19864
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/2461
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spelling ftcgiar:oai:cgspace.cgiar.org:10568/19864 2023-07-30T04:06:19+02:00 Sectoral approaches to improve regional carbon budgets Smith, Pete Nabuurs, G.J. Janssens, I.A. Reis, S. Marland, G. Soussana, J.F. Christensen, T.R. Heath, L. Apps, M. Alexeyev, V. Jingyun Fang Gattuso, J.-P. Guerschman, J.P. Yao Huang Jobbagy, E. Murdiyarso, Daniel Jian Ni Nobre, A. Changhui Peng Walcroft, A. Shao Qiang Wang Pan, Y. Guang Sheng Zhou 2012-06-04T09:12:48Z https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19864 https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/2461 en eng Smith, P., Nabuurs, G.-J., Janssens, I.A., Reis, S., Marland, G., Soussana, J.-F., Christensen, T.R., Heath, L., Apps, M., Alexeyev, V., Jingyun Fang, Gattuso, J.-P., Guerschman, J.P., Yao Huang, Jobbagy, E., Murdiyarso, D., Jian Ni, Nobre, A., Changhui Peng, Walcroft, A., Shao Qiang Wang, Pan, Y., Guang Sheng Zhou. 2008. Sectoral approaches to improve regional carbon budgets . Climatic Change 88 (3-4) :209-249. ISSN: 0165-0009. 0165-0009 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19864 https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/2461 Climatic Change carbon land management databases networking research agricultural land Journal Article 2012 ftcgiar 2023-07-12T20:36:12Z Humans utilise about 40% of the earth's net primary production (NPP) but the products of this NPP are often managed by different sectors, with timber and forest products managed by the forestry sector and food and fibre products from croplands and grasslands managed by the agricultural sector. Other significant anthropogenic impacts on the global carbon cycle include human utilization of fossil fuels and impacts on less intensively managed systems such as peatlands, wetlands and permafrost. A great deal of knowledge, expertise and data is available within each sector. We describe the contribution of sectoral carbon budgets to our understanding of the global carbon cycle. Whilst many sectors exhibit similarities for carbon budgeting, some key differences arise due to differences in goods and services provided, ecology, management practices used, land-management personnel responsible, policies affecting land management, data types and availability, and the drivers of change. We review the methods and data sources available for assessing sectoral carbon budgets, and describe some of key data limitations and uncertainties for each sector in different regions of the world. We identify the main gaps in our knowledge/data, show that coverage is better for the developed world for most sectors, and suggest how sectoral carbon budgets could be improved in the future. Research priorities include the development of shared protocols through site networks, a move to full carbon accounting within sectors, and the assessment of full greenhouse gas budgets. Article in Journal/Newspaper permafrost CGIAR CGSpace (Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research)
institution Open Polar
collection CGIAR CGSpace (Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research)
op_collection_id ftcgiar
language English
topic carbon
land management
databases
networking
research
agricultural land
spellingShingle carbon
land management
databases
networking
research
agricultural land
Smith, Pete
Nabuurs, G.J.
Janssens, I.A.
Reis, S.
Marland, G.
Soussana, J.F.
Christensen, T.R.
Heath, L.
Apps, M.
Alexeyev, V.
Jingyun Fang
Gattuso, J.-P.
Guerschman, J.P.
Yao Huang
Jobbagy, E.
Murdiyarso, Daniel
Jian Ni
Nobre, A.
Changhui Peng
Walcroft, A.
Shao Qiang Wang
Pan, Y.
Guang Sheng Zhou
Sectoral approaches to improve regional carbon budgets
topic_facet carbon
land management
databases
networking
research
agricultural land
description Humans utilise about 40% of the earth's net primary production (NPP) but the products of this NPP are often managed by different sectors, with timber and forest products managed by the forestry sector and food and fibre products from croplands and grasslands managed by the agricultural sector. Other significant anthropogenic impacts on the global carbon cycle include human utilization of fossil fuels and impacts on less intensively managed systems such as peatlands, wetlands and permafrost. A great deal of knowledge, expertise and data is available within each sector. We describe the contribution of sectoral carbon budgets to our understanding of the global carbon cycle. Whilst many sectors exhibit similarities for carbon budgeting, some key differences arise due to differences in goods and services provided, ecology, management practices used, land-management personnel responsible, policies affecting land management, data types and availability, and the drivers of change. We review the methods and data sources available for assessing sectoral carbon budgets, and describe some of key data limitations and uncertainties for each sector in different regions of the world. We identify the main gaps in our knowledge/data, show that coverage is better for the developed world for most sectors, and suggest how sectoral carbon budgets could be improved in the future. Research priorities include the development of shared protocols through site networks, a move to full carbon accounting within sectors, and the assessment of full greenhouse gas budgets.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Smith, Pete
Nabuurs, G.J.
Janssens, I.A.
Reis, S.
Marland, G.
Soussana, J.F.
Christensen, T.R.
Heath, L.
Apps, M.
Alexeyev, V.
Jingyun Fang
Gattuso, J.-P.
Guerschman, J.P.
Yao Huang
Jobbagy, E.
Murdiyarso, Daniel
Jian Ni
Nobre, A.
Changhui Peng
Walcroft, A.
Shao Qiang Wang
Pan, Y.
Guang Sheng Zhou
author_facet Smith, Pete
Nabuurs, G.J.
Janssens, I.A.
Reis, S.
Marland, G.
Soussana, J.F.
Christensen, T.R.
Heath, L.
Apps, M.
Alexeyev, V.
Jingyun Fang
Gattuso, J.-P.
Guerschman, J.P.
Yao Huang
Jobbagy, E.
Murdiyarso, Daniel
Jian Ni
Nobre, A.
Changhui Peng
Walcroft, A.
Shao Qiang Wang
Pan, Y.
Guang Sheng Zhou
author_sort Smith, Pete
title Sectoral approaches to improve regional carbon budgets
title_short Sectoral approaches to improve regional carbon budgets
title_full Sectoral approaches to improve regional carbon budgets
title_fullStr Sectoral approaches to improve regional carbon budgets
title_full_unstemmed Sectoral approaches to improve regional carbon budgets
title_sort sectoral approaches to improve regional carbon budgets
publishDate 2012
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19864
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/2461
genre permafrost
genre_facet permafrost
op_source Climatic Change
op_relation Smith, P., Nabuurs, G.-J., Janssens, I.A., Reis, S., Marland, G., Soussana, J.-F., Christensen, T.R., Heath, L., Apps, M., Alexeyev, V., Jingyun Fang, Gattuso, J.-P., Guerschman, J.P., Yao Huang, Jobbagy, E., Murdiyarso, D., Jian Ni, Nobre, A., Changhui Peng, Walcroft, A., Shao Qiang Wang, Pan, Y., Guang Sheng Zhou. 2008. Sectoral approaches to improve regional carbon budgets . Climatic Change 88 (3-4) :209-249. ISSN: 0165-0009.
0165-0009
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19864
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/2461
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