Diversifying Chile's climate action away from industrial plantations

Hoyos-Santillan J.; Miranda A.; Lara A.; Sepulveda-Jauregui A.; Zamorano-Elgueta C.; Gómez-González S.; Vásquez-Lavín F.; Garreaud R.D.; Rojas M.

Keywords: Carbon neutrality; Climate action; Native forest; Nature, based solutions; Net, zero; Wildfires

Abstract

As president of the Climate Change Conference of the Parties, Chile has advocated for developing ambitious commitments to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions to achieve carbon-neutrality by 2050. However, Chile's motivations and ambitious push to reach carbon-neutrality are complicated by a backdrop of severe drought, climate change impacts (i.e., wildfires, tree mortality), and the use of industrial plantations as a mitigation strategy. This has become more evident as widespread and severe wildfires have impacted large areas of industrial plantations, transforming the land-use, land-use change, and forestry sector from a carbon sink to a net carbon source. Consequently, Chile must diversify its climate actions to achieve carbon-neutrality. Nature-based solutions, including wetlands-peatlands and oceans, represent alternative climate actions that can be implemented to tackle greenhouse gas emissions at a national level. Diversification, however, must guarantee Chile's long-term carbon sequestration capacity without compromising the ecological functionality of biodiverse tree-less habitats and native forest ecosystems.

Más información

Título según WOS: Diversifying Chile's climate action away from industrial plantations
Título de la Revista: Environmental Science and Policy
Volumen: 124
Editorial: Elsevier Ltd.
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Página final: 89
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1016/j.envsci.2021.06.013

Notas: ISI