Climate change substitution factors for Canadian forest-based products and bioenergy

  • Thomas Cardinal
  • , Charles Alexandre
  • , Thomas Elliot
  • , Hamed Kouchaki-Penchah
  • , Annie Levasseur

Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticle publié dans une revue, révisé par les pairsRevue par des pairs

11 Citations (Scopus)

Résumé

Evaluating the climate change mitigation potential of the forest sector requires a holistic approach based on forest carbon (C) sequestration, C storage in harvested wood products (HWP) and substitution on markets. High uncertainty is associated with substitution factors, that express avoided fossil greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the use of forest-based products in replacement of GHG-intensive materials and fossil fuels. Few studies have focused on the development of substitution factors in Canada, resulting in the use of unrepresentative generic data. Here, we provide a framework to reduce uncertainties related to substitution factors for primary wood products in a Canadian context. A life cycle assessment framework is used to quantify fossil GHG emissions for a baseline and a wood-intensive scenario. For solid product substitution, we focused on the construction sector and analyzed a range of innovative wood buildings with steel and reinforced concrete as alternative materials. We found non-weighted averages of 0.80 tC/tC for sawnwood and 0.81 tC/tC for panels. For energy substitution, we analyzed cases with different specifications on biomass product, facility type and alternative fossil fuel source in non-residential heat production and biofuel transportation sectors. We found a non-weighted average of 0.80 tC/tC for non-residential heat production and 0.51 tC/tC for biofuel transportation, that can be interpreted as 0.91 tC/tC for heavy fuel oil, 0.69 tC/tC for light fuel oil and 0.68 tC/tC for natural gas substitution. These results provide a benchmark for substitution factors in Canada, to help guide forest management strategies for climate change mitigation.

langue originaleAnglais
Numéro d'article111940
journalEcological Indicators
Volume160
Les DOIs
étatPublié - mars 2024

SDG des Nations Unies

Ce résultat contribue à ou aux Objectifs de développement durable suivants

  1. SDG 7 – Energie propre et d'un coût abordable
    SDG 7 – Energie propre et d'un coût abordable
  2. SDG 9 – Industrie, innovation et infrastructure
    SDG 9 – Industrie, innovation et infrastructure
  3. SDG 12 – Consommation et production durables
    SDG 12 – Consommation et production durables
  4. SDG 13– Mesures relatives à la lutte contre les changements climatiques
    SDG 13– Mesures relatives à la lutte contre les changements climatiques
  5. SDG 15 – Vie terrestre
    SDG 15 – Vie terrestre

Empreinte digitale

Voici les principaux termes ou expressions associés à « Climate change substitution factors for Canadian forest-based products and bioenergy ». Ces libellés thématiques sont générés à partir du titre et du résumé de la publication. Ensemble, ils forment une empreinte digitale unique.

Contient cette citation