Book And Manuals
Guidelines for measuring carbon stocks in community-managed forests
Author: Bhishma P. Subedi, Shiva Shankar Pandey, Ajay Pandey, Eak Bahadur Rana, Sanjeeb Bhattarai, Tibendra Raj Banskota, Shambhu Charmakar, Rijan TamrakarPublisher: ANSAB, FECOFUN, ICIMOD, NORAD
Language: English
Date of Publication: July 2011 (Second edition)
ISBN: 978-9937-2-2612-7
Number of Pages: 66+10
Price: Free
Reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD) has gained major attention in international climate negotiations. Evolving discussions on REDD have brought forests to the forefront of both climate-change mitigation and adaptation. Among others, successful REDD programs require reliable, accurate, and cost-effective methods for measurement and monitoring of forest carbon storage. Despite the involvement of several academic research and development organizations in Nepal, common, reliable, and user friendly forest carbon measurement methodologies are still lacking. ’Forest Carbon stock Measurement: Guidelines for measuring carbon stocks in community managed forests’ was prepared by the technical team of Asia Network for Sustainable Agriculture and Bioresources (ANSAB) in consultation with the Project Management Unit-ICIMOD; international and national experts; and key stakeholders. It is a product of the REDD pilot project ‘Design and setting up of a governance and payment system for Nepal’s Community Forest Management under Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation’, an initiative implemented by the Asia Network for Sustainable Agriculture and Bioresources (ANSAB), International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), and Federation of Community Forest Users, Nepal (FECOFUN) with financial support from the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD). The guidelines describe methods, procedures, and steps for measuring organic carbon stored by forest land-use systems. They introduce globally accepted equipment, instruments, methodologies, procedures, and standards for forest carbon measurement and offer a detailed recipe for using them more efficiently and effectively. In other words, blended methods and procedures are presented coherently to make them applicable to a wide range of eco-regions and management regimes. The guidelines offer guidance on defining participatory boundaries with the help of remote-sensing maps and tools, as well as a complete set of procedures on application of remote sensing, GIS, and ground inventory. They provide, in short, precise, accurate, reliable, and user-friendly methodologies for forest carbon measurement which are adapted to Nepal’s specificities.