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      A holistic assessment of greenhouse gas dynamics from forests to the effects of wood products use in Austria

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          Carbon and decomposition model Yasso for forest soils

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            Forest bioenergy or forest carbon? Assessing trade-offs in greenhouse gas mitigation with wood-based fuels.

            The potential of forest-based bioenergy to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions when displacing fossil-based energy must be balanced with forest carbon implications related to biomass harvest. We integrate life cycle assessment (LCA) and forest carbon analysis to assess total GHG emissions of forest bioenergy over time. Application of the method to case studies of wood pellet and ethanol production from forest biomass reveals a substantial reduction in forest carbon due to bioenergy production. For all cases, harvest-related forest carbon reductions and associated GHG emissions initially exceed avoided fossil fuel-related emissions, temporarily increasing overall emissions. In the long term, electricity generation from pellets reduces overall emissions relative to coal, although forest carbon losses delay net GHG mitigation by 16-38 years, depending on biomass source (harvest residues/standing trees). Ethanol produced from standing trees increases overall emissions throughout 100 years of continuous production: ethanol from residues achieves reductions after a 74 year delay. Forest carbon more significantly affects bioenergy emissions when biomass is sourced from standing trees compared to residues and when less GHG-intensive fuels are displaced. In all cases, forest carbon dynamics are significant. Although study results are not generalizable to all forests, we suggest the integrated LCA/forest carbon approach be undertaken for bioenergy studies.
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              A basal area increment model for individual trees growing in even- and uneven-aged forest stands in Austria

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Carbon Management
                Carbon Management
                Informa UK Limited
                1758-3004
                1758-3012
                November 01 2016
                September 29 2016
                November 01 2016
                : 7
                : 5-6
                : 271-283
                Affiliations
                [1 ] University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Department of Economics and Social Sciences, Institute of Marketing and Innovation, Vienna, Austria
                [2 ] Environment Agency Austria, Vienna, Austria
                [3 ] Austrian Research Centre for Forests (BFW), Vienna, Austria
                [4 ] Kompetenzzentrum Holz (Wood K plus), Market Analysis and Innovation Research, Vienna, Austria
                [5 ] University of Graz, Institute of Systems Sciences, Innovation and Sustainability Research, Graz, Austria
                Article
                10.1080/17583004.2016.1230990
                cb7b8bda-e8c9-42ae-8301-08ddc34b7a6e
                © 2016
                History

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