Sentences with phrase «ipcc guidelines used»

Not exact matches

The category land - use change and forestry of the 1995 IPCC Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas Inventories, used by Parties to report their second national communications has three main sub-categories:
In their national communications, most Parties reported emissions / removals from land - use change and forestry in accordance with the IPCC Guidelines.
The vast majority of Parties reporting emissions / removals for the land - use change and forestry category provided estimates for the sub-category changes in forest and other woody biomass stocks (managed forests in Draft IPCC Guidelines).
As in the previous IPCC Guidelines, the Revised 1996 IPCC Guidelines include these sub-categories in the land - use change and forestry category, as well as a sub-category for other.
In applying the IPCC Guidelines, some Parties have identified methodological issues and problems with respect to estimating and reporting emissions and removals for the land - use change and forestry category.
IPCC - 37: IPCC 37 will consider two methodology reports: the «2013 Supplement to the 2006 IPCC Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas Inventories: Wetlands»; and the good practice guidance on estimating GHG emissions and removals from land use, land - use change and forestry under the Kyoto Protocol.
This activity report includes a summary of a meeting held in Yokohama, Japan on 23 - 25 February 2010 to review the use of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) guidelines on forest greenhouse gas (GHG) inventories particularly with regard to the use of remote sensing and ground - based methods of data acquisition on C stocks and area changes of forests.
At the workshop, participants shared their views on the use of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 2006 Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas and the revision of the Guidelines for the preparation of national communications by parties included in Annex I to the Convention, Part I.
It called on the UNFCCC to use the most recent IPCC guidance and guidelines as a basis for estimating anthropogenic forest - related greenhouse gas emissions by sources and removals by sinks, forest carbon stocks and forest area changes.
As per the Revised IPCC Guidelines for national GHG inventory (1996), the potential emission values are used only in case of unavailability of the actual emission values.
According to FAO, the FAOSTAT Emissions Land Use database provides country - level estimates of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions based on FAOSTAT activity data using Tier 1 computations, following 2006 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Guidelines for National GHG Inventories.
Parties to the UNFCCC have agreed to use the IPCC Guidelines in reporting to the convention.
There is nothing in the IPCC guidelines that state that only peer - reviewed material can be used.
Of course there's the scandal that just broke regarding the «gold standard of peer reviewed science» that climate alarmists always reference, who's data is used as the basis for many other climate studies, as well as IPCC reports, and even US EPA guidelines - The Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia, UK.
In accordance with the Revised 1996 IPCC Guidelines, which are used by Parties to prepare their greenhouse gas inventories, emissions from fuel sold to ships or aircraft engaged in international transport (known as «bunker fuels») should not be included in national emission totals, but reported separately.
They justified doing this primarily on the basis of the guidelines stated to have been used by the IPCC (see Appendix A of the EPA responses) and others in reviewing their reports.
One - hundred year global warming potentials (GWPs) from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 1996 (SAR) were used to convert emissions to CO2 equivalents (see the UNFCCC reporting guidelines).
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