Carbon sequestered through increased forest biomass provides a low cost means to curb emissions and has become a major focus of New Zealand’s Emissions Trading Scheme. We present a forest planning optimisation model where land use is governed by forest owners maximising the returns to both timber harvest and carbon sequestration. By varying carbon prices, we model efficient trade-offs between the two forest activities along a modified production possibility frontier for four distinct wood supply regions in New Zealand. Results show that while more productive regions such as the Central North Island (CNI) and Northland have a greater capacity as a carbon sink, it is the less productive regions that have a comparative advantage in carbon sequ...
Despite considerable interest in the potential for forests to sequester carbon, the impact of carbon...
Under the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme, foresters can obtain carbon units as their forests s...
<div><p>Climate change mitigation benefits from the land sector are not being fully realised because...
Human induced global warming poses major risks to world ecosystems and economy. Carbon sequestration...
New Zealand is both an Annex I Party to the UNFCCC, and an Annex B country of the Kyoto Protocol. B...
Climate change is one of the toughest challenges facing the world today. Putting a price on carbon e...
New Zealand is the first, and still the only, country to include forest landowners as full and, in s...
Carbon sequestration has become an important source of supplementary revenue from forest plantations...
In 2008, the New Zealand government passed climate change legislation called the New Zealand Emissio...
Policies that create the opportunity for private landowners to receive carbon credits from reforesta...
Forestry has been considered to have potential in reducing the atmospheric concentration of carbon d...
New Zealand has taken a progressive step in developing a national trading system for greenhouse gas ...
Under the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme, forests planted on or after January 1, 1990, earn ca...
Under the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme, forests planted on or after 1st January 1990 earn ca...
Competition between the economic and natural assets of forests is emphasised in capercaillie lekking...
Despite considerable interest in the potential for forests to sequester carbon, the impact of carbon...
Under the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme, foresters can obtain carbon units as their forests s...
<div><p>Climate change mitigation benefits from the land sector are not being fully realised because...
Human induced global warming poses major risks to world ecosystems and economy. Carbon sequestration...
New Zealand is both an Annex I Party to the UNFCCC, and an Annex B country of the Kyoto Protocol. B...
Climate change is one of the toughest challenges facing the world today. Putting a price on carbon e...
New Zealand is the first, and still the only, country to include forest landowners as full and, in s...
Carbon sequestration has become an important source of supplementary revenue from forest plantations...
In 2008, the New Zealand government passed climate change legislation called the New Zealand Emissio...
Policies that create the opportunity for private landowners to receive carbon credits from reforesta...
Forestry has been considered to have potential in reducing the atmospheric concentration of carbon d...
New Zealand has taken a progressive step in developing a national trading system for greenhouse gas ...
Under the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme, forests planted on or after January 1, 1990, earn ca...
Under the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme, forests planted on or after 1st January 1990 earn ca...
Competition between the economic and natural assets of forests is emphasised in capercaillie lekking...
Despite considerable interest in the potential for forests to sequester carbon, the impact of carbon...
Under the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme, foresters can obtain carbon units as their forests s...
<div><p>Climate change mitigation benefits from the land sector are not being fully realised because...