Essential Climate Variables GTOS 67
T12 Assessment of the status PDF 702Kb |
FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS (FAO) |
Chief
|
ABSTRACT
The importance of biomass as an Essential Climate
Variable is due to both its role as a carbon sink during
the process of photosynthesis, its role in governing
ecosystem productivity and its growing use for
generation of bioenergy. Sustainable management
of biomass sources, in particular forests, which store
most of the Earth’s biomass, contributes to reduction
of CO2 in the atmosphere, mitigation of climate
change and protection of other ecosystem services
including biodiversity conservation and water
resources. Estimates of biomass change (due to land
use and management practices or natural processes)
enable a direct measurement of carbon sequestration
or loss (as long as associated changes in soil carbon
are accounted for) that can help validate carbon-cycle
models and to quantify the human induced impacts
on global climate change. Carbon emission from
deforestation is the largest source of greenhouse gas
emissions in many developing countries. |
© FAO 2009