What woodfuels can do to mitigate climate change

Climate change can be mitigated in several ways, but most strategies emphasize reducing greenhouse gas emissions by reducing energy use and switching to energy sources that are less carbon intensive than fossil fuels. This publication explores the scope, potential and implications for using woodfuels to replace fossil fuels and thereby contribute to climate change mitigation. It analyses the current woodfuel offset mechanisms in place and their relative emission reduction potenti als. The scope is limited to solid woodfuels (fuelwood, charcoal, prepared biomass such as woodchips and pellets, and recovered products or residues from wood processing industries). However, some themes covered will be applicable to all woodfuels, notably the socio-economic and environmental impacts, financing options and overall development implications of more intensive and efficient use of woodfuels. The publication will be of interest to specialists and policy-makers in fo restry, climate change and renewable energy, as well as to forest managers, students and general audiences interested in learning more about the role of forests in energy production and the resulting mitigation potential.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Office of Assistant Director-General (Forestry Department)
Format: Book (stand-alone) biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/I1756E
http://www.fao.org/3/a-i1756e.pdf
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spelling dig-fao-it-20.500.14283-I1756E2024-03-16T15:08:59Z What woodfuels can do to mitigate climate change What woodfuels can do to mitigate climate change Office of Assistant Director-General (Forestry Department) Climate change can be mitigated in several ways, but most strategies emphasize reducing greenhouse gas emissions by reducing energy use and switching to energy sources that are less carbon intensive than fossil fuels. This publication explores the scope, potential and implications for using woodfuels to replace fossil fuels and thereby contribute to climate change mitigation. It analyses the current woodfuel offset mechanisms in place and their relative emission reduction potenti als. The scope is limited to solid woodfuels (fuelwood, charcoal, prepared biomass such as woodchips and pellets, and recovered products or residues from wood processing industries). However, some themes covered will be applicable to all woodfuels, notably the socio-economic and environmental impacts, financing options and overall development implications of more intensive and efficient use of woodfuels. The publication will be of interest to specialists and policy-makers in fo restry, climate change and renewable energy, as well as to forest managers, students and general audiences interested in learning more about the role of forests in energy production and the resulting mitigation potential. 2023-10-05T10:48:36Z 2023-10-05T10:48:36Z 2010 2019-05-28T13:39:28.0000000Z Book (stand-alone) 2706-8773 0258-6150 https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/I1756E http://www.fao.org/3/a-i1756e.pdf English FAO Forestry Paper 0259-2800|0258-6150|02586150|1014-1952|19992882 FAO application/pdf
institution FAO IT
collection DSpace
country Italia
countrycode IT
component Bibliográfico
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databasecode dig-fao-it
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname David Lubin Memorial Library of FAO
language English
description Climate change can be mitigated in several ways, but most strategies emphasize reducing greenhouse gas emissions by reducing energy use and switching to energy sources that are less carbon intensive than fossil fuels. This publication explores the scope, potential and implications for using woodfuels to replace fossil fuels and thereby contribute to climate change mitigation. It analyses the current woodfuel offset mechanisms in place and their relative emission reduction potenti als. The scope is limited to solid woodfuels (fuelwood, charcoal, prepared biomass such as woodchips and pellets, and recovered products or residues from wood processing industries). However, some themes covered will be applicable to all woodfuels, notably the socio-economic and environmental impacts, financing options and overall development implications of more intensive and efficient use of woodfuels. The publication will be of interest to specialists and policy-makers in fo restry, climate change and renewable energy, as well as to forest managers, students and general audiences interested in learning more about the role of forests in energy production and the resulting mitigation potential.
format Book (stand-alone)
author Office of Assistant Director-General (Forestry Department)
spellingShingle Office of Assistant Director-General (Forestry Department)
What woodfuels can do to mitigate climate change
author_facet Office of Assistant Director-General (Forestry Department)
author_sort Office of Assistant Director-General (Forestry Department)
title What woodfuels can do to mitigate climate change
title_short What woodfuels can do to mitigate climate change
title_full What woodfuels can do to mitigate climate change
title_fullStr What woodfuels can do to mitigate climate change
title_full_unstemmed What woodfuels can do to mitigate climate change
title_sort what woodfuels can do to mitigate climate change
publishDate 2010
url https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/I1756E
http://www.fao.org/3/a-i1756e.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT officeofassistantdirectorgeneralforestrydepartment whatwoodfuelscandotomitigateclimatechange
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