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Life cycle assessment of carbon flow through Harvested wood products

Bhattacharyya, Anindita ; Mazumdar, Asis ; Roy, Pankaj Kumar and Sarkar, Anasua LU orcid (2013) In Ecology, Environment and Conservation 19(4). p.1195-1209
Abstract

The paper discusses a life cycle model of wood products of Dalbergia sissoo from Saharanpur and Bijnor to calculate and trace the amount of carbon retained. A simulation model is built to trace the fate of carbon bound in the products produced in the year 2009 for a period of 200 years, until most of the carbon is released back into the atmosphere. The amount of carbon that enters the life cycle is calculated based on the field data collected since 2009 at Saharanpur and Bijnor. The roots (20%) are heavy and left out in the forest for decomposition. The bole and the thick branches (70.45%) are used by the wood based industry and the rest of the thin branches and leaves (9.47%) are used as fuel wood after being dried. As most of the... (More)

The paper discusses a life cycle model of wood products of Dalbergia sissoo from Saharanpur and Bijnor to calculate and trace the amount of carbon retained. A simulation model is built to trace the fate of carbon bound in the products produced in the year 2009 for a period of 200 years, until most of the carbon is released back into the atmosphere. The amount of carbon that enters the life cycle is calculated based on the field data collected since 2009 at Saharanpur and Bijnor. The roots (20%) are heavy and left out in the forest for decomposition. The bole and the thick branches (70.45%) are used by the wood based industry and the rest of the thin branches and leaves (9.47%) are used as fuel wood after being dried. As most of the portion is used as timber the amount of carbon being released in the first year is restricted up to 10% only from the burning of fuel wood and the rest of the 20% in root decomposes in many years to form the humus part of the soil. The results of the life cycle analysis are undertaken in business as usual, S2 and S2 scenarios. The sensitivity analysis shows that length of the lifespan has only a marginal effect on the amount of carbon sequestered in all over harvested wood products pool, but has significant effect on the amount of carbon stocked in the products pool in use. Thus, an important conclusion from this new scenario analysis is that increasing the life span of the products (i.e. by increasing the durability), carbon can be locked over a period equal to the time needed to grow the timber for these products. Economic tools like environmental benchmarking process (forest certification) can play major role in increasing the life span of the wood products. Apart from this, greater carbon storage can be achieved by promoting fuel efficient energy systems in the production houses instead of burning fossil fuels like diesel.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
keywords
Climate scenarios, Dalbergia sisso, Harvested wood products, Life cycle analysis, Sensitivity analysis
in
Ecology, Environment and Conservation
volume
19
issue
4
pages
1195 - 1209
publisher
Enviro Media
external identifiers
  • scopus:84897829589
ISSN
0971-765X
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
d12b5701-2f97-452d-8693-b904c2970de3
alternative location
http://www.envirobiotechjournals.com/article_abstract.php?aid=4848&iid=166&jid=3
date added to LUP
2018-10-09 09:53:50
date last changed
2022-01-31 05:58:11
@article{d12b5701-2f97-452d-8693-b904c2970de3,
  abstract     = {{<p>The paper discusses a life cycle model of wood products of Dalbergia sissoo from Saharanpur and Bijnor to calculate and trace the amount of carbon retained. A simulation model is built to trace the fate of carbon bound in the products produced in the year 2009 for a period of 200 years, until most of the carbon is released back into the atmosphere. The amount of carbon that enters the life cycle is calculated based on the field data collected since 2009 at Saharanpur and Bijnor. The roots (20%) are heavy and left out in the forest for decomposition. The bole and the thick branches (70.45%) are used by the wood based industry and the rest of the thin branches and leaves (9.47%) are used as fuel wood after being dried. As most of the portion is used as timber the amount of carbon being released in the first year is restricted up to 10% only from the burning of fuel wood and the rest of the 20% in root decomposes in many years to form the humus part of the soil. The results of the life cycle analysis are undertaken in business as usual, S<sub>2</sub> and S<sub>2</sub> scenarios. The sensitivity analysis shows that length of the lifespan has only a marginal effect on the amount of carbon sequestered in all over harvested wood products pool, but has significant effect on the amount of carbon stocked in the products pool in use. Thus, an important conclusion from this new scenario analysis is that increasing the life span of the products (i.e. by increasing the durability), carbon can be locked over a period equal to the time needed to grow the timber for these products. Economic tools like environmental benchmarking process (forest certification) can play major role in increasing the life span of the wood products. Apart from this, greater carbon storage can be achieved by promoting fuel efficient energy systems in the production houses instead of burning fossil fuels like diesel.</p>}},
  author       = {{Bhattacharyya, Anindita and Mazumdar, Asis and Roy, Pankaj Kumar and Sarkar, Anasua}},
  issn         = {{0971-765X}},
  keywords     = {{Climate scenarios; Dalbergia sisso; Harvested wood products; Life cycle analysis; Sensitivity analysis}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{01}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{1195--1209}},
  publisher    = {{Enviro Media}},
  series       = {{Ecology, Environment and Conservation}},
  title        = {{Life cycle assessment of carbon flow through Harvested wood products}},
  url          = {{http://www.envirobiotechjournals.com/article_abstract.php?aid=4848&iid=166&jid=3}},
  volume       = {{19}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}