This analysis estimates the profitability of restoring wetlands for the sale of carbon offsets. Results indicate that about 7% to 12% of the recently restored grassed wetlands of the prairie pothole and high plains regions and 20% to 35% of the forested wetlands of the Mississippi alluvial valley and Gulf-Atlantic coastal flats regions could have carbon offset values that exceed the cost of restoring the wetland and the opportunity cost of moving the land out of agricultural production. Given the uncertainties, the analysis applies conservative estimates of wetlands’ costs, offset prices, and wetlands’ effects on greenhouse gases
USDA has spent more than $4.2 billion on wetland restoration and protection over the last two decade...
Coastal wetlands are known to sequester significant amounts of carbon dioxide, while also providing ...
Coastal wetlands play an important role in sequestering atmospheric carbon, but these ecosystems are...
Coastal wetlands have been valued for a variety of ecosystem services including carbon sequestration...
This paper evaluates the potential of payments for carbon sequestered through wetland and riparian c...
USGS’s Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center and USDA’s Agricultural Research Service collaborat...
Carbon offsets are becoming a necessary tool in carbon emission reduction. The offsets obtained thro...
The biosphere removes nearly a quarter of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions each year through b...
Here we describe a pilot wetland carbon project located 30 km west of New Orleans where measurements...
Restoring degraded peat soils presents an attractive, but largely untested, climate change mitigatio...
Carbon offsets are becoming a necessary tool in carbon emission reduction. The offsets obtained thro...
We evaluated the potential of prairie wetlands in North America as carbon sinks. Agricultural conver...
KEY FINDINGS The assessment of terrestrial wetland carbon stocks has improved greatly since the Fi...
Wetlands are among the most important natural resources on earth, as sources of biological, cultural...
Wetlands store large amounts of carbon (C) in biomass and soils, playing a crucial role in offsettin...
USDA has spent more than $4.2 billion on wetland restoration and protection over the last two decade...
Coastal wetlands are known to sequester significant amounts of carbon dioxide, while also providing ...
Coastal wetlands play an important role in sequestering atmospheric carbon, but these ecosystems are...
Coastal wetlands have been valued for a variety of ecosystem services including carbon sequestration...
This paper evaluates the potential of payments for carbon sequestered through wetland and riparian c...
USGS’s Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center and USDA’s Agricultural Research Service collaborat...
Carbon offsets are becoming a necessary tool in carbon emission reduction. The offsets obtained thro...
The biosphere removes nearly a quarter of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions each year through b...
Here we describe a pilot wetland carbon project located 30 km west of New Orleans where measurements...
Restoring degraded peat soils presents an attractive, but largely untested, climate change mitigatio...
Carbon offsets are becoming a necessary tool in carbon emission reduction. The offsets obtained thro...
We evaluated the potential of prairie wetlands in North America as carbon sinks. Agricultural conver...
KEY FINDINGS The assessment of terrestrial wetland carbon stocks has improved greatly since the Fi...
Wetlands are among the most important natural resources on earth, as sources of biological, cultural...
Wetlands store large amounts of carbon (C) in biomass and soils, playing a crucial role in offsettin...
USDA has spent more than $4.2 billion on wetland restoration and protection over the last two decade...
Coastal wetlands are known to sequester significant amounts of carbon dioxide, while also providing ...
Coastal wetlands play an important role in sequestering atmospheric carbon, but these ecosystems are...