File:GHG intensity 2000.svg
Summary
Greenhouse gas intensity in 2000
Data from the World Resources Institute's <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://cait.wri.org/">CAIT 4.0 database</a> (registration required). Includes CO2, CH4, N20, PFCs, HFCs and SF6. Estimates of the effects of land-use change are included; bunker-fuel emissions are not. GDP in International (PPP) Dollars.
The land-use estimates include the following (list from the relevant <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://cait.wri.org/downloads/DN-LUCF.pdf">CAIT data note</a>):
- Clearing of natural ecosystems for permanent croplands (cultivation)
- Clearing of natural ecosystems for permanent pastures (no cultivation)
- Abandonment of croplands and pastures with subsequent recovery of carbon stocks to
those of the original ecosystem
- Shifting cultivation (swidden agriculture) (repeated clearing, abandonment, and reclearing
of forests in many tropical regions)
- Wood harvest (industrial wood as well as fuel wood) - it is important to note that these
estimates include the emissions of carbon from wood products (burned, stored in longterm pools, decayed over time)
- For the U.S. only, management of wildfires and woody encroachment
Also from the CAIT data note: "It is also important to note that the calculated flux of carbon does not explicitly include changes in carbon stocks that may result from various forms of management. Examples of what is not included are agricultural intensification, fertilization, the trend to no-till agriculture, thinning of forests, changes in species or varieties, and other silvicultural practices."
And the data note warns that "these estimates of national sources and sinks of carbon from land-use change are uncertain on the order of +/- 150% for large fluxes, and +/- 50 MtC/yr for estimates near zero."
So CAIT's land-use estimates are a bit wild. They are, however, the best currently available at a national level.
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 10:23, 5 January 2017 | Error creating thumbnail: File missing | 940 × 477 (1.98 MB) | 127.0.0.1 (talk) | <p><b>Greenhouse gas intensity in 2000</b> </p> <p>Data from the World Resources Institute's <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://cait.wri.org/">CAIT 4.0 database</a> (registration required). Includes CO<sub>2</sub>, CH4, N20, PFCs, HFCs and SF6. Estimates of the effects of land-use change are included; bunker-fuel emissions are not. GDP in International (PPP) Dollars. </p> <p>The land-use estimates include the following (list from the relevant <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://cait.wri.org/downloads/DN-LUCF.pdf">CAIT data note</a>): </p> <ul><li> Clearing of natural ecosystems for permanent croplands (cultivation)</li></ul> <ul><li> Clearing of natural ecosystems for permanent pastures (no cultivation)</li></ul> <ul><li> Abandonment of croplands and pastures with subsequent recovery of carbon stocks to</li></ul> <p>those of the original ecosystem </p> <ul><li> Shifting cultivation (swidden agriculture) (repeated clearing, abandonment, and reclearing</li></ul> <p>of forests in many tropical regions) </p> <ul><li> Wood harvest (industrial wood as well as fuel wood) - it is important to note that these</li></ul> <p>estimates include the emissions of carbon from wood products (burned, stored in longterm pools, decayed over time) </p> <ul><li> For the U.S. only, management of wildfires and woody encroachment</li></ul> <p>Also from the CAIT data note: "It is also important to note that the calculated flux of carbon does not explicitly include changes in carbon stocks that may result from various forms of management. Examples of what is not included are agricultural intensification, fertilization, the trend to no-till agriculture, thinning of forests, changes in species or varieties, and other silvicultural practices." </p> <p>And the data note warns that "these estimates of national sources and sinks of carbon from land-use change are uncertain on the order of +/- 150% for large fluxes, and +/- 50 MtC/yr for estimates near zero." </p> <p>So CAIT's land-use estimates are a bit wild. They are, however, the best currently available at a national level. </p> |
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