A Participatory Approach to Evaluating Strategies for Forest Carbon Mitigation in British Columbia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What main objectives do stakeholders and Indigenous Peoples prioritize when discussing carbon mitigation in BC’s forest sector?
- What are BC’s stakeholders and Indigenous Peoples’ preferences for, and perceived acceptability, credibility, and effectiveness of, climate change mitigation options in BC’s forest sector?
2. Forest Carbon Management in British Columbia
3. Methods
3.1. Analytic-Deliberative Processes
- Clarification of the decision context: The main objective is to identify the problem or question being addressed and who should be involved in the process.
- Structuring of the decision problem: This step involves the identification of evaluation criteria (also termed values, objectives, or points of view) with which the alternatives will be assessed.
- Identification and outline of alternatives: The objective of this phase is to produce and describe a set of alternatives that can be evaluated and compared by the participants.
- Elicitation of preferences: The goal of this step is to elicit participants’ preferences, that is the evaluation of the importance of the criteria and alternatives.
- Trade-offs among alternatives: In this final step, the preferences or weightings elicited both for criteria and alternatives are pooled together to rank the alternatives and highlight trade-offs.
3.2. Data Collection
3.2.1. Stakeholder Analysis
3.2.2. First Series of Participatory Workshops: Objective Identification
3.2.3. Second Series of Workshops: Evaluation of Mitigation Strategies
3.3. Data Analysis
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Final Aggregated List of Objectives and Their Relative Importance
4.2. Evaluation of the Six Mitigation Strategies
4.2.1. Group Evaluation: Performance of the Strategies against the Objectives
Bioenergy
Higher Utilization
Longer-Lived Wood Products (LLWP)
Reduced Harvest
Old Growth Conservation
Rehabilitation
4.2.2. Individual Support for Strategies: Regional and Sectoral Variations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Strategy | Description |
---|---|
Bioenergy | A recovery of a portion of harvest residues for local bioenergy production to replace fossil fuels. |
A reduction of on-site burning of harvest residues (pile-burning of slash). | |
Higher Utilization | Higher utilization of wood from harvest cut blocks so that more wood is extracted per hectare, thereby lowering the area harvested while keeping the harvest volume unchanged. |
Increased proportion of salvage harvesting, referring to the harvesting of trees in forests affected by natural disturbances such as fire and insects, to replace green tree harvesting. | |
Longer-lived wood products (LLWP) | The production of a commodity mix shifted towards a greater proportion of longer-lived products (sawnwood, other solid wood, and panels), at the expense of pulp and paper products. Both the baseline harvest volume and the proportion exported for each product are assumed to remain unchanged. |
Reduced harvest | A reduction in harvest with a corresponding decrease in production of wood products. |
Rehabilitation * | The reforestation of underproductive sites where no trees would otherwise be planted. |
Old growth conservation | Prevent the harvesting of old growth forests, defined as stands older than 250 years old. |
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Peterson St-Laurent, G.; Hoberg, G.; Sheppard, S.R.J. A Participatory Approach to Evaluating Strategies for Forest Carbon Mitigation in British Columbia. Forests 2018, 9, 225. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9040225
Peterson St-Laurent G, Hoberg G, Sheppard SRJ. A Participatory Approach to Evaluating Strategies for Forest Carbon Mitigation in British Columbia. Forests. 2018; 9(4):225. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9040225
Chicago/Turabian StylePeterson St-Laurent, Guillaume, George Hoberg, and Stephen R. J. Sheppard. 2018. "A Participatory Approach to Evaluating Strategies for Forest Carbon Mitigation in British Columbia" Forests 9, no. 4: 225. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9040225
APA StylePeterson St-Laurent, G., Hoberg, G., & Sheppard, S. R. J. (2018). A Participatory Approach to Evaluating Strategies for Forest Carbon Mitigation in British Columbia. Forests, 9(4), 225. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9040225