Climate Change and the Cost of Carbon Sequestration: The Case of Forest Management
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2014-09-23T10:24:20Z
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2014-09-23T10:24:20Z
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2008
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The Kyoto protocol allows Annex I countries to deduct carbon sequestered by land use, land-use change and forestry from their national carbon emissions. Thornley and Cannell (2000) demonstrated that the objectives of maximizing timber and carbon sequestration are not complementary. Based on this finding, this paper determines the optimal selective management regime taking into account the underlying biophysical and economic processes. The results show that the net benefits of carbon storage only compensate the decrease in net benefits of timber production once the carbon price has exceeded a certain threshold value. The sequestration costs are significantly lower than previous estimates
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application/pdf
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eng
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Barcelona Graduate School of Economics
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Reproducció digital del document publicat a: http://research.barcelonagse.eu/tmp/working_papers/329.pdf
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© Barcelona GSE Working Papers Series, 2008, núm. 329
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Articles publicats (D-EC)
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Tots els drets reservats
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dc.title
Climate Change and the Cost of Carbon Sequestration: The Case of Forest Management
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info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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Cap
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info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
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013013