New article: Oregon fires burn California offset project and raise questions about the permanence of California’s approach to forest carbon. carbonplan.org/research/offse…
This was a collaboration between our team and co-authors @claudherb, Jared Stapp, Grayson Badgley, and Bill Anderegg.
We quantify the burned area of a large offset project (ACR260) impacted by the Riverside / Beachie Creek / Lionshead Fires
California has a “buffer pool” of extra offset credits that can be retired in case of forest carbon loss from fire, drought, and other impacts. But is the forest buffer pool robust enough to handle the inevitable fires of the future?
Our modeling work suggests that fires could easily deplete the offset buffer pool and will almost certainly make a large dent in it — leaving fewer credits to deal with other climate-driven disturbances, like drought.
Overall, we find that the expected carbon losses from this fire illustrate how California’s approach of using forests to mitigate climate change may need re-evaluation.
Thanks to @claudherb and Jared Stapp for identifying the fire’s impact on this offset project and then collaborating with us to put this analysis together.
As rising temperatures threaten the health of populations worldwide, people need to know when and where extreme heat will occur. We collaborated with @washingtonpost, creating a new dataset that is the basis for an important series. washingtonpost.com/climate-enviro…
With heat, temperature doesn't tell the whole story. You need to know about humidity, sunlight, wind, and how they vary by location. We built on a foundation of academic work to create a new dataset that projects heat risks at the local level through 2060. carbonplan.org/research/extre…
Importantly, we're making all aspects of our extreme heat modeling open: the code, the input datasets, and the results. We want to make all of the strengths, assumptions, and approximations available for public scrutiny. github.com/carbonplan/ext…
In a new commentary, we document how the world’s largest carbon offset registry is trying to disrupt the modest market reform process it once touted as the solution to the industry’s credibility troubles. (1/7) carbonplan.org/research/verra…
Verra, which issues two out of every three credits in global markets, wants the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market to drop its plan to analyze credit quality and focus, instead, on whether registries have an adequate process. (2/7)
Most cynically, Verra is pushing the Integrity Council to adopt the aviation industry’s CORSIA standards in place of an independent review. Why? Because CORSIA’s weak standards would have no impact on Verra’s offerings. (3/7) nature.com/articles/d4158…
Today we’re releasing a new collection of global downscaled climate datasets to support impact and risk analysis. (1/9) carbonplan.org/research/cmip6…
We’re also introducing an interactive mapping tool for exploring, inspecting, and comparing downscaled data. (2/9) carbonplan.org/research/cmip6…
Downscaling is a necessary step in climate impacts modeling — it transforms global climate model outputs into a form spatially and temporally tuned for detailed projection. Planners and regulators then use the downscaled datasets for impact and risk assessment. (3/9)
We found that nearly 28% of credits “bridged” to the blockchain come from what we call “zombie” projects. These projects were previously inactive before the blockchain gave new life to their low-quality credits. (3/7)
New tool and article: an interactive map explorer for estimating the costs and climate benefits of seaweed farming for carbon removal and biomass products. (1/8) carbonplan.org/research/seawe…
Estimating the costs and benefits of growing seaweed as a climate solution depends on a complex set of biophysical and economic parameters. This tool makes it possible to explore these parameters, understand how they interact, and compare spatially-specific options. (2/8)
Alongside the map tool, we’ve also released an explainer that outlines the basic details of the biophysical and technoeconomic modeling, key assumptions and caveats, and some core findings. (3/8) carbonplan.org/research/seawe…
Wondering whether soil carbon credits can contribute to effective climate strategy? We’re pleased to announce a buyer’s guide to soil carbon offsets, from @j_zelikova @FreyaChay @freemanlab and @dcullenward. (1/13) carbonplan.org/research/soil-…
Interest in soil carbon removal has never been greater, as @SavorTooth recently wrote for @grist. Various private and government efforts are emerging to credit soil carbon, but it can be hard to tell what’s actually going on. (2/13) grist.org/agriculture/us…
In our new guide, we set out to evaluate voluntary soil carbon protocols across four key categories. We found a messy and uneven landscape. (3/13)