Study: Thinning Forests for Bioenergy Can Worsen Climate

A new study out of the Geos Insti­tute in Ash­land, Ore­gon con­cludes that selec­tive­ly log­ging or “thin­ning” forests for bioen­er­gy can increase the amount of car­bon diox­ide in the atmos­phere and exac­er­bate cli­mate change.

The study, “Thin­ning Com­bined With Bio­mass Ener­gy Pro­duc­tion May Increase, Rather Than Reduce, Green­house Gas Emis­sions,” by D.A. Del­laSala and M. Koop­man, chal­lenges bioen­er­gy and tim­ber indus­try asser­tions that log­ging forests will aid in the fight against cli­mate change.

Del­laSala and Koop­man also refute assump­tions that wild­fires are big­ger or more severe than in the past, cit­ing mul­ti­ple stud­ies show­ing that the occur­rence of wild­fire has actu­al­ly “changed lit­tle from his­tor­i­cal (ear­ly Euro­pean set­tle­ment) times.”

The West­ern Governor’s Asso­ci­a­tion has stat­ed that 10.6 mil­lion acres of west­ern forests are avail­able for “haz­ardous fuel reduc­tion.” Yet, instead of instead of the build up of “fuel” (aka small trees and under­sto­ry plants) being the main dri­ver of large wild­fire, the study authors blame cli­mate, name­ly drought and high tem­per­a­tures, explain­ing that, “dur­ing severe weath­er events, even thinned sites will burn.”

Instead of pre­vent­ing large wild­fires, the study argues that thin­ning can increase the chance of severe fire by open­ing the for­est canopy which can dry out the for­est, leav­ing flam­ma­ble slash piles on the ground, and allow­ing winds to pen­e­trate the pre­vi­ous­ly shel­tered stands, poten­tial­ly spread­ing wild­fire. Post-fire “sal­vage” log­ging is also thought to increase the risk of a re-burn. 

Car­bon emis­sions from wild­fire have long been an argu­ment to log forests, in an effort to har­ness ener­gy from trees that may burn at some point any­way. Yet find­ings show that after a fire the major­i­ty of the car­bon remains in dead trees, with severe fires that kill most trees in the area emit­ting 5–30% of stored car­bon. Severe fires account for 12–14% of the area burned in large fires. 

Even in the cas­es where thin­ning would be effec­tive at stop­ping wildfire–typically small fires of lim­it­ed threat to pub­lic safety–the study cites com­put­er sim­u­la­tions esti­mat­ing a 5–8% chance of a thinned par­cel expe­ri­enc­ing fire with­in the first twen­ty years, when fuels are low­est. The chance of encoun­ter­ing severe fire is 2%.

Del­laSala and Koop­man also urge an accu­rate car­bon account­ing of for­est bioen­er­gy, cau­tion­ing that the amount of car­bon diox­ide released from burn­ing woody bio­mass is “often com­pa­ra­ble to coal and much larg­er than that of oil and nat­ur­al gas due to inef­fi­cien­cies in burn­ing wood for fuel com­pared to more ener­gy- dense fos­sil fuels.”

In the rare cas­es in which a thinned for­est is allowed to grow back with­out repeat­ed log­ging, the sev­er­al decades over which forests could reab­sorb car­bon “con­flicts with cur­rent pol­i­cy imper­a­tives requir­ing dras­tic cuts in emis­sions over the near term.”

The study warns about “large-scale clear­ing of forests” at a time when nat­ur­al forests are need­ed to buffer the plan­et against run­away cli­mate change. 

“Woody bio­mass,” said Del­laSal­la in a Decem­ber 17 phone inter­view, “almost nev­er pen­cils out as an effi­cient renew­able ener­gy source.” 


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