151. Improving reporting of national greenhouse gas emissions from forest fires for emission reduction benefits: An example from Australia.
- Author
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Volkova, Liubov, Roxburgh, Stephen H., Surawski, Nicholas C., Meyer, C.P. (Mick), and Weston, Christopher J.
- Subjects
FOREST fires ,FIRE ,GREENHOUSE gases - Abstract
Highlights • Refinement of the IPCC equation for estimating greenhouse gas emission from forest fires using country specific information. • Provides key recommendations for improving forest fire emissions estimations. • Highlights the complexity of using data from multiple sources and provides possible solutions. Abstract Forest fires are a significant contributor to global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Accurate reporting of GHG emissions from forest fires requires development of detailed methodologies and country specific data for estimating emissions. In recent years, Australia has updated its national methodology for reporting GHG emissions from fires on temperate forested lands, using a Tier 2 approach of the 2006 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas Inventories. This involved refinement of the equation for estimating GHG emissions from fires provided in the Guidance, and the revision of country specific data which was derived from a comprehensive literature review. The refinements were key to transparent reporting and evaluation of the climatic impacts of mitigation actions such as forest fire management. In this paper we describe the steps required to develop a Tier 2 method in reporting fire emissions using this Australian example, the lessons learnt, and the steps required to reduce uncertainties in estimates. This paper may assist other countries seeking to estimate and report GHG emissions from forest fires by moving from the default Tier 1 method to Tier 2 using country-specific information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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