Sentences with phrase «including afforestation»

SBSTA 16 (FCCC / SBSTA / 2002 / 6, paragraphs 33 (a)--(c)-RRB- initiated the discussions regarding definitions and modalities for including afforestation and reforestation project activities under the CDM in the first commitment period.

Not exact matches

This is thought to be connected to a number of factors including, predation, afforestation, changes in land management and climate change.
Most low - emission scenarios involve substantial land - use change (LUC) including the expansion of bioenergy and food crops, as well as afforestation.
These include «reforestation, afforestation, carbon - friendly agriculture, bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCs), enhanced weathering, ocean fertilisation, or direct air capture and carbon storage (DACCs),» the report adds.
COP 10 adopted a decision on simplified modalities and procedures for small - scale afforestation and reforestation project activities under the CDM and measures to facilitate their implementation (Decision 14 / CP.10) which included a draft COP / MOP decision on this matter.
SBSTA 21 (FCCC / SBSTA / 2004 / 13, paragraphs 39 — 41) continued to consider this issue, including a proposal for a draft decision on simplified modalities and procedures for small - scale afforestation and reforestation project activities under the clean development mechanism and measures to facilitate their implementation (FCCC / SBSTA / 2004 / INF.12) and forwarded a draft decision on this matter for adoption at COP 10.
Biological sequestration includes direct removal of CO2 from the atmosphere through land - use change, afforestation, reforestation, carbon storage in landfills and practices that enhance soil carbon in agriculture.
The public money will fund projects exploring the real - world potential of «negative emissions» technologies (NETs), including soil carbon management, afforestation, bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), enhanced weathering and direct capture of methane from the air.
These include the effects that trees have on local atmospheric chemistry and potentially the clouds above them; until these are fully understood it is somewhat difficult to attribute a «temperature benefit» of a specific magnitude to a given afforestation scenario.
In comparison, the total gain estimated from the UN REDD programme if fully implemented (including slowing deforestation and wide afforestation programmes), would by 2050 according to the IPCC amount to approximately 12 - 15 % of the required emission reductions.
Especially, forestry mitigation options — including reduced deforestation, forest management, afforestation, and agro ‐ forestry — are estimated to contribute 0.2 ─ 13.8 GtCO2 / yr of economically viable abatement in 2030 at carbon prices up to 100 USD / tCO2eq.
Model users determine the path of net GHG emissions (e.g., CO2 from fossil fuels and land use, non-CO2 GHGs including CH4, N2O, F - Gasses, Montreal Protocol Gasses and CO2 sequestration from afforestation), at the country or regional level, through 2100.
Drawdown's yield model calculates total annual global supply of crops and livestock products based on their area of adoption in each of the three scenarios, and global yield impacts of each solution (including both gains due to increased productivity per hectare and losses due to reduction of productive area due to adoption of non-agricultural solutions, e.g., loss of grazing area due to afforestation of grasslands).
Most low - emission scenarios involve substantial land - use change (LUC) including the expansion of bioenergy and food crops, as well as afforestation.
Of this, fossil fuel combustion and cement production contributed 375 ± 30 PgC and land use change (including deforestation, afforestation (planting new forest) and reforestation) contributed 180 ± 80 PgC.
More than 120 countries included forests in their commitments, with activities ranging from afforestation in Afghanistan to sustainable forest management in Zambia.
Mitigation scenarios that achieve the ambitious targets included in the Paris Agreement typically rely on greenhouse gas emission reductions combined with net carbon dioxide removal (CDR) from the atmosphere, mostly accomplished through large - scale application of bioenergy with carbon capture and storage, and afforestation.
It reiterates — also with «high confidence» — earlier calls for «an integrated approach» that includes «reducing CO2 emissions by reducing deforestation, forest degradation and forest fires; storing carbon in terrestrial systems (for example, through afforestation); and providing bioenergy feedstocks.»
The interactive has the ability to include Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) approaches, which would pull CO2 out of the atmosphere and into soils and storage via a possible set of activities, including bioenergy with carbon capture and storage, agricultural soil carbon, biochar, mineralization, afforestation, and direct air capture.
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