Thursday, April 21, 2016

Potential for carbon forestry on highly erodable land in New Zealand - Euan Mason & Justin Morgenroth




New Zealand has enormous potential to use forests to sequester carbon dioxide as part of its contribution to mitigating climate change. This preliminary report sets out results of an analysis requested by the Green Party of New Zealand to examine the carbon sequestration potential of a range of alternative afforestation strategies.  Erosion-prone land was chosen as a target because re-establishing forest greatly reduces the likelihood of further erosion, and such land is often relatively unproductive as farmland. The report was delivered in August 2015. As a reference, New Zealand typically emits approximately 80 million tonnes of CO2-e per year.

To produce estimates of potential carbon dioxide sequestration rates by new forests we used Geographic Information System layers describing land titles[1], Land Use Capability classes from the New Zealand Land Resource Inventory[2], and Erosion Susceptibility classes defined in a study by Mark Bloomberg et al. (2011). Erosion susceptibility classes are shown in Figure 1. 

 
Figure 1 – ESC classes by Bloomberg et  al. (2011)

We also created a mask that provided estimates of “Kyoto compliant” land, that is, land that is not currently in forest but that could reasonably be planted in forest.  This was based on the LCDB v4.0 dataset. The classes that were explicitly included in our analysis were:
 
Gorse and/or broom
High producing exotic grassland
Low producing exotic grassland
Short-rotation cropland
Landslides

In addition, broad radiata pine productivity classes were conservatively defined by mean annual rainfall and mean annual temperature. Land was allocated into four productivity categories: Unsuitable for radiata pine; low productivity; medium productivity; and highly productive. This analysis was constrained by time, and we recommend that the analysis be extended to define productivity using a physiological model developed by Euan Mason. This latter model takes into account variation in radiation, soil characteristics, rainfall,   temperature and vapour pressure deficit on a monthly time step, and so would provide more secure estimates of potential productivity across New Zealand than the quick estimates we have used for this report.  The draft potential productivity categories are shown in Figure 2.


Figure 2 – Draft potential productivity categories for radiata pine in New Zealand defined by rainfall and temperature.  Green=Highly productive, Yellow=moderately productive, brown=low productivity, and white=unsuitable.

Table 1 summarises land that is either highly or extremely erodible (based on erosion susceptibility classes of 'high' or 'very high') and that might be planted in carbon forests by productivity classes. Approximately 1.3 M ha are available in low, medium or high productivity categories, or 5% of New Zealand’s land area.  Areas shown are in hectares.  Most of the erodable land was in Land Use Capability classes VI to VIII, with the majority in class VII.

We stress that this is a draft analysis, and numbers are subject to revision.

The areas identified as erodible and available for planting are shown in Figure 3.

Table 1 – Provisional summaries of highly erodible land available for planting (ha)

Threatened environment class[1]
----------Productivity class--------
TOTAL
Low
Medium
High
0
89
39
27
155
1
51457
112189
34435
198081
2
34545
97540
129380
261465
3
22914
59242
98758
180914
4
87952
38753
72864
199569
5
38508
9429
38038
85975
6
131892
65396
188505
385793
TOTAL
367357
382588
562007
1311952


[1]
Threatened Class
Threatened Class
0
No Data
1
Acutely Threatened
2
Chronically Threatened
3
At Risk
4
Critically Underprotected
5
Underprotected
6
Less Reduced and Better Protected

Three points in the landscape were selected that were roughly representative of average conditions in the low, medium and high productivity classes shown in Figure 2.  Forecaster software created by Scion Research was used to run the 300 Index model at each location for a silvicultural regime that comprised planting 1000 radiata pine stems/ha and leaving them to grow, and also a regime that is considered typical in pruned crops of radiata pine, with 3 pruning lifts and low final crop stockings in the range of 300 stems/ha after early thinning to waste.  Model C_CHANGE was employed to estimate carbon dioxide sequestration in these regimes.  The plant and leave option was adjusted downwards for the following reasons:

1) We don't have any data for a long-rotation plant and leave option, and so the growth and yield model we used was extrapolating for that option.
2) Estimation of carbon contents of large trees was based on a tiny dataset.
3) Examination of model outputs suggested that the growth and yield model may have been underestimating tree death from competition during the simulation period.
4) The adjusted model brought data more into line with published data (Woollons & Manley, 2012) we do have over long rotations, and so we know the values can be achieved.

Figure 3 – Areas that were available for afforestation and also judged to be at high or very high risk of erosion.

In addition, C yields for the plant and leave options were further reduced to allow for attrition of whole stands after 30 years.  Nevertheless, estimates of sequestration for the radiata pine plant and leave regimes remain highly uncertain.

Sources estimating sequestration rates for native species were consulted[4], and yield tables of carbon sequestration for typical native species were created that mirrored the tables for radiata pine but with a slower development. The mean sequestration rates used for native species ranged from 3.8 to 9.1 tonnes of CO2/ha/year depending on site type.  Figure 4 shows the accumulated CO2 over sixty years for each option.
Figure 4 – CO2 accumulated per hectare over 60 years for each option simulated, with three lines representing high, medium and low productivity.  Plant and leave options have been adjusted downwards from the original simulation.

Yield tables over sixty years were created for the following options:

1) Plant and leave the entire area in radiata pine at a planting rate of 50,000 ha/year over 26 years
2) Plant at the same rate but prune, thin and harvest all of it at an appropriate time then replant
3) A 50:50 mixture 1 and 2
4) Plant the total area in native forest at 50,000 ha/year
5) A 50:50 mixture of 1 and 4 with 1 confined to the 3 least threatened environments
6) A 50:50 mixture of 3 and 4 with 3 confined to the 3 least threatened environments

Figure 5 shows annual sequestration rates for the six simulated scenarios.
Figure 5 – Millions of tonnes of CO2 accumulated per year over the entire area of erodable land for the six planting scenarios. Year zero is the year that planting 50,000 ha/year for 26 years was initiated.

Sequestration rates for many of the scenarios would see us more than meet our international commitments for climate change mitigation.  Moreover, planting 50,000 ha per year is easily achievable; during the 1990s New Zealand planted up to 100,000 ha per year.  If we allow for an afforestation cost of $3000/ha, then the annual cost of such a programme would be $150 million.  At $20/tonne of carbon we would need to sequester 7.5 million tonnes of carbon dioxide in any given year to cover this cost. Four of the six scenarios greatly exceed this level of sequestration after the first decade.

Why radiata pine?

Radiata pine has been chosen for the following reasons:

1) It grows rapidly and sequesters C at a much higher rate than native species
2) We are experts at producing seedlings for this species and they are cheap.
3) It will grow on a wide range of sites and we understand how to establish it on diverse sites, despite its sensitivity to shade and frost.
4) It is not a high country wilding risk.  It is very intolerant of both shade and frost, and would only seed naturally on moist lowland areas where adjacent land was not intensively grazed.
5) On warm, moist sites (either medium or high productivity categories), it would act as a nurse crop for native forest, and the C reservoirs we establish would ultimately change to become native forest so long as seed sources were available in the local vicinity (Figure 6).
6) Studies suggest that radiata pine will continue to sequester carbon for up to 100 years on some sites, but we have assumed 60 in this analysis.  This means that the forests would remain as sinks for some considerable time.

Recent work by Adam Forbes as part of his PhD thesis at the School of Forestry, University of Canterbury, identifies the need for local seed sources in order for native forest to regenerate underneath exotic plantations.  It would therefore be sound policy to make establishment of appropriate indigenous seed sources a condition for those receiving credits for carbon sequestration in their exotic forests.

Figure 6 - Forest biomass dynamics after introducing the exotic pine species Pinus radiata to the native species pool. Dynamics are modeled for a site near Christchurch, New Zealand. Species aboveground biomass is cumulative. "Kunzea and Leptospermum" include the early colonizing species K. ericoides and L. scoparium. "Others" include the species Griselinia lit- toralis, Pittosporum eugenioides, Aristotelia serrata, Elaeocarpus hookerianus, Fuchsia ex- corticata, Nothofagusfusca, and N. solandri var. solandri Figure from Hall (2001).

Important points

Planting new forests on 1.3 million hectares of erosion-prone land in New Zealand (about 5% of our land area) could sequester an enormous amount of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, greatly helping us meet our international commitments for climate change mitigation.

Contrary to public perceptions, radiata pine is probably the most useful species for this purpose because it is unlikely to be a wilding, we can grow it very cheaply, it can be nurtured on a wide range of sites, and it sequesters carbon dioxide at a very high rate.

Establishment of local indigenous seed sources can promote ecological succession to native forest in unharvested stands of radiata pine, and so establishment of small areas of such seed sources should be a precondition to receiving credits for exotic forest carbon sequestration.


Caveats

This draft has been produced in a short time and so we recommend further analysis, particularly a refinement of rates of sequestration on diverse land types. Our estimates of erodible land area available are preliminary.  It is likely that incentives to plant may well result in some planting of land that is not highly prone to erosion.

References





[1] https://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/804-nz-property-titles/
[2]  https://lris.scinfo.org.nz/layer/76-nzlri-land-use-capability/
[3]
Threatened Class
Threatened Class
0
No Data
1
Acutely Threatened
2
Chronically Threatened
3
At Risk
4
Critically Underprotected
5
Underprotected
6
Less Reduced and Better Protected

[4] There is an excellent summary at http://maxa.maf.govt.nz/forestry/pfsi/carbon-sequestration-rates.htm

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Response to "ETS 2014 Facts and Figures" released on August 20th 2015

New Zealand's climate change policy failure is the main feature of the 2014 report on New Zealand's emissions trading scheme (ETS). More than 95% of surrendered credits were imports, and the cost to emitters was approximately 10 cents per imported 'hot air' credit during most of 2014, compared to an average of approximately $4 for New Zealand Units (NZUs), our domestic carbon credits, during that year. In addition, during 2014 taxpayers gave 4.4 million NZUs to 'trade exposed' industries, representing a windfall for them of approximately $17 million, which is their allocation multiplied by the difference in price between domestic and imported credits; we essentially paid them to pollute.  Given the low cost of imported 'hot air' carbon credits and the fact that we paid people to pollute, it is unsurprising that New Zealand now lags behind almost all of the rest of the world in its climate change response.

Since imported credits were outlawed earlier this year our NZU price has gradually risen to around $7/credit. This price is much too low to encourage the level of tree planting we need in order to avoid a blowout in our carbon accounts during the 2020s as trees planted during the 1990s are harvested. Figure 3 of the 'Facts and Figures' report shows that only 42% of post-1989 forests are registered in the ETS. Figure 4 shows the dramatic reduction in new forest planting and the resumption of deforestation that coincided with imports of cheap 'hot air' credits that began in earnest towards the end of 2011.

New Zealand's creative accounting with 'hot air' credits has done two things:
1) Our government has used the ETS to harvest a large volume of 'hot air' credits that will likely be used to claim that we 'met' our national commitment to reduce net emissions to 5% below 1990 gross levels by 2020.
2) Many ETS participants have hoarded approximately 153 million NZUs in the ETS registry, often by storing grandfathered allocations of NZUs and then surrendering cheap 'hot air' credits to account for their pollution instead. This will enable them to meet their ETS commitments for many years to come.

Our ETS can be made to work if we:

•Stop grandfathering credits
•Have no random gifting of NZUs from Government to industry
•Apply the ETS equally to all sectors
•Allow trading only between sequesterers and emitters
    –If you overpollute you pay someone else to clean up
•Manage our domestic credits as a currency rather than as a commodity
    –Set reduction targets each year
    –Require surrenders only for “over target” greenhouse gas emissions
    –Set annual emission reduction targets that stabilise the NZU price
    –Plan to gradually reduce our NZU price as the world solves the climate change problem

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Why Labour’s climate change policy will fail



Where to begin?  This is a complicated topic, and I can see that Labour has good intentions.  I have given up on the National Party.  If I hear Tim Groser (Minister for Climate Change Issues) say one more time that New Zealand is one of the few countries with a price on carbon then I am gonna scream.  New Zealand’s price on carbon is 11 cents per tonne for most of us, and some of us are rewarded for polluting.  Yes, that’s right, we pay people for emitting greenhouse gases.  We are an international pariah.  We have never led the pack, and we are one of the world’s worst polluters.  Labour’s policy, however well-meant, will make us even worse still.

Firstly, let’s examine the stats.  We increased our net greenhouse gas emissions by 111% since 1990.  Yes, we met our weak Kyoto commitment to get our net emissions between 2008 and 2012 to the level of our gross emissions in 1990.  Our gross emissions increased by 22%.  This all clear in Tim Groser’s report to the United Nations Framework Convention onClimate Change.  We received a fossil award in 2012 for our shabby performance. We are the fifth worst polluters per capita, at 18 tonnes of CO2-e/person.  We have never “led the pack” as Tim Groser asserts.  We are tail-end Charlies.  This is embarrassing and shameful.

So, how do we pay people to pollute?  All polluting industries except farming are required to submit credits each year to account for their pollution.  We give “trade exposed” polluting industries our domestic carbon credits, New Zealand Units (NZUs), equivalent to 90% of their pollution. It’s called “grandfathering”, and the idea is that they only need to find an extra 10% to cover all their pollution.  If they reduced their pollution by more than 10% then they could have some credits to sell to other polluters.  Sounds OK so far, doesn’t it?  It’s not OK.  Our current government has chosen, as a matter of policy, not to restrict imports of foreign carbon credits.  Have a look at the current price of credits in New Zealand on CommTrade.  See the “ERU” price at 11 cents (September 2nd)?  Those are “hot air” credits that represent no change in behaviour in response to climate change.  They are fraudulent, as detailed in my previous blogs.  Almost all surrenders to our credit registry from polluters in 2013 were ERUs.  Note that the NZU price is $4.35.  This means that “trade exposed” industries are gifted, by you and I, NZUs worth $4.35 for 90% of their pollution, and they can submit ERUs worth 11 cents to cover their pollution and make a $4.24 windfall for polluting.  This is worth millions of dollars to them and it’s one of the reasons why our Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), the “heavy lifter” and central plank of our climate change policy according to Tim Groser, is an utter failure so far.  See my previous blogs for the other reasons the ETS is failing and also how we could fix it.

Labour’s policy would make things worse.  Farming currently emits roughly half of our annual greenhouse gas emissions of approximately 75 million tonnes of CO2-e, but its principal emissions are not covered by the ETS. Labour proposes to bring farming into the ETS as a “trade exposed” participant, with 90% grandfathering, and also require 50% of credit surrenders to be NZUs.  This means that the other 50% could be "hot air" ERUs, and farmers would get a reward for polluting of more than $150 million per year (the difference in price between their gifted NZUs and the ERUs they would be allowed to submit).

Our ETS could work, and I’ve set out how to make it work in previous blogs, but sadly Labour’s current policy will just make things worse.  Yeah, I let the Labour Party know about this when its policy first emerged.  It hasn’t responded.

UPDATE: Moana Mackey, Labour's Spokesperson on Climate Change, is going to talk with me about this.