Abstract:
This study considers trade-offs between timber harvest and carbon
sequestration on National Forest and other public lands by contemporaneously linking
a model of public harvest and inventory to a carbon accounting system. The public
harvest model treats three harvest scenarios. The first minimizes the cost of meeting
harvest requests that approximate current harvest policy. The second and third models
represent two extremes of harvest policy: maximum strict even-flow scheme and noharvest.
The current harvest scenario results in a maximum average net carbon
sequestration of approximately 35 Teragrams per decade. The maximum strict evenflow
scenario results in a maximum of 19 Teragrams of net carbon sequestration on an
average decadal basis, because of losses to forest product decay and reduced
understory growth. The no harvest scenario results in the highest total carbon
holdings, 164 Pentagrams at the end of the 100 year planning horizon, and has an
average net sequestration rate of 65 Teragrams each decade.