The State of Washington has a goal to reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, the year around which the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) recommended we must limit global warming to 1.5 °C above that of pre-industrial times or face catastrophic changes. Researchers from The Nature Conservancy and the University of Washington calculated the potential for a suite of Natural Climate Solution (NCS) pathways to reduce Washington’s net emissions under three implementation scenarios: Limited, Moderate, and Ambitious. The study found that NCS could reduce annual emissions accounting for 4% to 9% of the state’s net zero goal by 2050. These potential reductions largely rely on changing forest management practices on portions of private and public timber lands. The study found high potential reductions in three regions closely tied to major business sectors: private industrial forestry in southwestern coastal forests, cropland agriculture in the Columbia Basin, and urban and rural development in the Puget Trough. This presentation will discuss the study findings, particularly those related to forest management, avoided conversion of forests to development, and forest restoration.
Northwest Natural Resource Group will then drill down to the level of an individual forest stand and demonstrate how a shift to longer forest rotations increases not only carbon storage but also, ultimately, timber production. The presentation will explore the barriers to this transition, as well as its ecological and economic benefits.
Conservation Geographer, The Nature Conservancy - Washington
James (Jamie) Robertson is a Conservation Geographer with The Nature Conservancy in Washington and holds a Master’s degree in Geography from Appalachian State University in his home-state of North Carolina. His experience with spatial analysis and...
Executive Director, Northwest Natural Resource Group
Since 2017, Seth has served as Executive Director of the Northwest Natural Resource Group, which helps people understand and practice ecological forestry in Washington and Oregon. Previously, he was a writer and analyst at Seattle-based Climate...