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ACTIVITIES IMPLEMENTED JOINTLY (AIJ)
List of
Projects
USIJI Uniform Reporting Document:
Activities Implemented Jointly Under the Pilot Phase
A. Description of the AIJ project
1. Title of project: Reforestation in Vologda
2. Host country: Russian Federation
3. Brief project description:
This project is a reforestation project located in Vologda, about 300 miles northeast of Moscow. Two thousand
hectares (ha) of collective state farmland adjacent to and within the Russky Sever National Park will be converted
from hay fields back to forest. The land will be removed from hay production, and allowed to regenerate naturally,
supplemented initially by planting on about 15% of the area. If regeneration proceeds slowly, additional planting
or soil preparation will be implemented during the third year of the project. Greenhouse gas benefits accrue from
forest carbon sequestration that would not have occurred in the absence of project activities.
4. Participants:
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Name of Organization or Individual
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Country
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Vologda Department of Natural Resources
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Russian Federation
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Center for Environmental Economics (CEE)
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Russian Federation
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Environmental & Economic Consulting
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U.S.A.
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Item
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Organization
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Name of organization (original language) or
Name of individual if unaffiliated with any organization
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Name of organization (English)
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Vologda Department of Natural Resources
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Acronym (original language)
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Acronym (English)
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Department
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Function(s) within the AIJ project activities
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Project administration
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Street
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City
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State
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Vologda
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Post code
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Country
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Russian Federation
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Telephone
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Fax
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E-mail
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World Wide Web-URL address
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Administrative Officer Responsible for the Project
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Surname
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Gladkovsky
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First name, middle name
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Branislav
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Job title
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Deputy Director of the Vologda Region
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Direct telephone
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7-817-225-1419
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Direct fax
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7-817-225-1454
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Direct e-mail
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Contact Person for AIJ Activities (if different from the Administrative Officer)
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Surname
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First name, middle name
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Job title
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Direct telephone
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Direct fax
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Direct e-mail
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Item
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Organization
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Name of organization (original language)
or
Name of individual if unaffiliated with any organization
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Center for Environmental Economics
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Name of organization (English)
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(Same as above)
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Acronym (original language)
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CEE
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Acronym (English)
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(Same as above)
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Department
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Function(s) within the AIJ project activities
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Project administration
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Street
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Ogareva 5, Build. 3, of. 531
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City
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Moscow
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State
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Post code
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103918
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Country
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Russian Federation
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Telephone
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Fax
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E-mail
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World Wide Web-URL address
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Administrative Officer Responsible for the Project
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Surname
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Golub
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First name, middle name
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Alexander
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Job title
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Director
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Direct telephone
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7-095-229-9464
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Direct fax
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7-095-245-0963
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Direct e-mail
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Contact Person for AIJ Activities (if different from the Administrative Officer)
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Surname
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First name, middle name
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Job title
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Direct telephone
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Direct fax
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Direct e-mail
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Item
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Organization
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Name of organization (original language) or
Name of individual if unaffiliated with any organization
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Environment & Economic Consulting
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Name of organization (English)
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(Same as above)
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Acronym (original language)
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Acronym (English)
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Department
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Function(s) within the AIJ project activities
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Street
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39 West 67th Street, #204
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City
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New York
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State
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New York
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Post code
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10023
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Country
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U.S.A.
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Telephone
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Fax
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E-mail
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World Wide Web-URL address
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Administrative Officer Responsible for the Project
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Surname
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LeBlanc
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First name, middle name
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Alice
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Job title
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Senior Economist
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Direct telephone
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212-779-3045
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Direct fax
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212-779-1336
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Direct e-mail
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alice_leblanc@msn.com
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Contact Person for AIJ Activities (if different from the Administrative Officer)
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Surname
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First name, middle name
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Job title
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Direct telephone
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Direct fax
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Direct e-mail
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5. Description of AIJ project activities
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Item
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Type of Project
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Sector(s)
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Land-use change and forestry
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Primary activity(ies)
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Assisted natural regeneration
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Project Location
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Country
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Russian Federation
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Exact location (city, state, region)
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Adjacent to and within the Russky Sever National Park in the Vologda region, in the northern part of the
Eastern European Plain (between 59 and 61 degrees of the northern latitude) and about 300 miles northeast
of Moscow.
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Key Dates and Current Stage of Project
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Project starting date (month/year)
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Date dependent of funding
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Project ending date (month/year)
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Date dependent of funding
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Project lifetime (years)
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60
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Current stage of project
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Mutally agreed
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General Project Description and Technical Data
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This project will reforest 2,000 ha of hay fields that are part of several state collective farms. Of the
total area, 1,075 ha are interspersed within the Russky Sever National Park, although they are not part of
the National Park, and 925 ha are located adjacent to the National Park. Under the project, the land will
be removed from hay production and allowed to regenerate naturally, supplemented initially by 15 percent
planting. If regeneration proceeds slowly, additional planting or soil preparation will be implemented in
the third year of the project.
The land was originally spruce-pine forest but has been used for agriculture for at least the past 75
years. Prior to the commencement of the project, the hayfields were used and administered by collective
state farms as agricultural land. The soils are moderately well drained with a well developed plowed layer.
The project developers do not believe that this site will be reforested in the absence of the project.
To implement the project and to protect the reforested area, the developers will undertake the following
legal measures: (1) under the authority of the Vologda Land Committee, the land use status of the project
site will be changed from agricultural to an ecological classification; (2) after this change, a proposal
will be made to transfer the land to the status of Ecological Preserve under the jurisdiction of the
Russian Federal Environmental Ministry; and (3) the project land will also become part of the lands
administered by the National Park Administration and the administrators of this project.
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6. Cost
(a) Explanation of methodology for calculating cost data
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Methodology for Calculating Cost Data
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Detailed information is available on land leasing costs and monitoring costs. These costs are explained
below.
Land Leasing Costs: The project site will be leased by the project administrators from the farmers,
who are currently using the land for hay production at a mutually agreed price of $10 per ha per year. The
leasing cost was determined based on the value of the hay currently produced on the site. This was done by
converting the nutritional content of the hay to grain equivalent and applying the grain price. Based on
this calculation, it was determined that the grain-equivalent value of hay production per ha, per year is
29.9-37.26 thousand roubles, or $9.4-$11.7. The annual leasing cost will be $20,000 ($10 x 2,000 ha).
Monitoring Costs: Monitoring costs include one-time costs and on-going costs. One-time monitoring
costs include costs for (1) developing allometric equations (i.e., regression equations) to estimate carbon
sequestration benefits, (2) soil testing, (3) equipment, and (4) personnel costs. On-going monitoring costs
consist of costs for (1) yearly site inspections and (2) periodic monitoring, performed six to eight times
during the life of the project. Periodic monitoring costs include costs for (1) measuring carbon
sequestered in trees and root biomass, (2) hiring workers and coordinators for soil testing and computing
soil carbon estimates, and (3) renting airplanes and equipment for taking aerial photographs. Soil testing
will be done only if the investor wants to receive credit for soil carbon.
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(b) Cost data–Project development
This information is not yet available.
(c) Cost data–Project implementation
Annual cost information is not yet available.
Itemized Project Implementation Costs
7. Monitoring and verification of AIJ project activities and results
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Item
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Party(ies) that will be monitoring project activities
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A Russian scientist, an American scientist, and Russian technicians will be selected to monitor
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Party(ies) that will be externally verifying project results
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A scientist or NGO approved by USIJI
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Date when the monitoring plan became (or will become) operational (month/year)
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This information is not yet available.
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Types of data that will be collected
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Above- and belowground biomass density, tree height and diameter measurements, soil carbon content
(optional)
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Description of Monitoring and Verification Activities and Schedule for Implementation
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There are two components to monitoring the project’s carbon dioxide benefits: (1) measuring carbon
sequestration in the aboveground and root biomass, and (2) measuring soil carbon. A sampling procedure will
be developed and sample plots will be chosen for calculation of biomass and soil carbon. The sample plots
will be selected based on differences in vegetation, soils, and past land-use history, and will be measured
for tree heights and diameters. A method will be developed for extrapolating the carbon sequestration
estimates from the sample plot measurements to the entire site. In addition, sample plots of land will be
selected to remain as hay field and will be monitored for a reference scenario comparison.
The aboveground and root biomass will be measured using (1) a "clip plot" method of cutting and
weighing small trees on sample plots in year 5, and (2) allometric equations and sample plot measurements
in year 10, and every ten years after that. Carbon sequestration estimates will be calculated by applying
the coefficients of allometric equations to the periodic sample measurements of tree height and diameter.
There will be an annual walk-through inspection of the entire project site to monitor its overall
conditions. Periodic aerial photographs will be used to verify overall site condition and the
representativeness of sample plots in years 1, 5, 10, and every 10 years onward.
The second part of the monitoring plan involves an estimate of the carbon sequestered in soils. This part
of the monitoring plan will be carried out if project investors would like to claim soil carbon benefits.
The monitoring plan will include digging 100 sample pits for soil samples to measure carbon concentrations
and soil bulk density in year 1, 10, and every ten years onward.
For external verification, resources have been budgeted for a visit to the project site by a scientist or
NGO approved by the USIJI in year 10, when the first actual sample plot measurement will occur. Discussions
have been initiated with the Russian Ministry of the Environment to provide verification services for the
project. The development of allometric equations will be supervised by independent American and Russian
scientists. If soil is monitored for claiming soil carbon credits, the American and Russian scientists
hired to supervise the soils monitoring in year 10 could also verify the monitoring of this component.
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B. Governmental approval
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Item
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Please check one of the following.
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This report is a first report or
This report is an intermediate report or
This report is a final report.
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Please check one of the following:
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This report is a joint report. Letter(s) of approval of this report from the designated national authority
of the other Party(ies) involved in the activity is(are) attached in Section J, Annex or
This report is a separate report.
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Additional comments (if any):
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C. Compatibility with, and supportiveness of, national economic development and socioeconomic and environmental
priorities and strategies
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Compatibility with Economic Development and Socioeconomic and Environmental Priorities
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This information is not yet available.
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D. Environmental, social/cultural, and economic impacts of the AIJ project
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Non-Greenhouse-Gas Environmental Impacts of the Project
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By increasing forest cover, this project will provide additional wildlife habitat. Since the site is next
to a relatively rare, old growth taiga forest, it will also preserve and extend the natural European taiga
forests (which have been extensively replaced by commercial plantations), along with the northern regional
animal and plant species.
The project area will be made a specially protected ecological area under the protection of the Ministry of
the Environment and part of the National Park. It is anticipated that this status will outlast the project
lifetime and that there will be no harvest of wood on site.
The proposed monitoring plan for the project could serve as a cost effective model for monitoring
reforestation projects, and will advance knowledge of carbon sequestration estimation.
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Social/Cultural Impacts of the Project
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This information is not yet available.
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Economic Impacts of the Project
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Compensation to the farmers in the project area is expected to be used to finance activities that are more
lucrative than hay production, such as poultry and egg production. Further, the developers expect that the
establishment of the lease arrangements and legal measures that are necessary to implement this project
will help promote creation of a market for land in Vologda.
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E. Greenhouse gas impacts of the AIJ project
1. Scenario description
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Item
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Site Designation
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Site number (order of presentation in this report)
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1 of 1
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Site name/designation
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Vologda
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Project sector
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Land-use change and forestry
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Reference Scenario
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Primary activity(ies)
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Hay production
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Has the reference scenario changed since the last report? (If yes, explain any changes below.)
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Yes
No
This is the first project report.
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Description:
The project site is 2,000 ha of marginal agricultural crop land. It was originally forested, and then
converted to agricultural use in about the mid 1800’s. The project developers believe that without
the project, the land would remain in hay production, as it has been for at least 75 years. In its current
agricultural use, the site is considered to be in equilibrium with respect to carbon storage, with no net
change in carbon storage occurring in biomass or soils. A small amount of fossil fuel emissions are
associated with managing the hay fields. The hay fields are considered relatively unproductive.
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Predicted Project Scenario
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Primary activity(ies)
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Assisted natural regeneration
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Description:
The project’s main measure to sequester carbon is to allow natural regeneration to occur. Under the
project scenario, the land will be removed from hay production and allowed to regenerate naturally,
replaced initially by 15% planting. Additional planting and soil preparation may be implemented in the
third year of the project, if regeneration proceeds too slowly. The carbon sequestration arises from
vegetation growth over the 60 year lifetime of the project.
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Actual Project
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Primary activity(ies)
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This information is not yet available.
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Description:
This information is not yet available.
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2. GHG emission/sequestration calculation methodology
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GHG Emission/Sequestration Calculation Methodology
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Site number
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1 of 1
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Project sector
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Land-use change and forestry
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Description of Calculation Methodology for the Reference Scenario
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The developers believe that in the absence of the project, hay production will continue, even after
agricultural lands are privatized in the near future. The land condition is also assumed to remain
unchanged over the next 60 years. For example, soil erosion or land degradation is not anticipated to
occur, nor is biomass or soil carbon storage. The carbon present in the aboveground vegetation at the
initiation of the project is estimated at 1-2 t C/ha. Fossil fuel emissions in the reference scenario are
estimated to be small and, therefore, have not been taken into account.
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Description of Calculation Methodology for the Project Scenario
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Carbon sequestration is expected to occur due to aboveground vegetation growth and accumulation of
belowground living biomass pools or roots. It is assumed that soil and dead biomass carbon stocks are in
equilibrium. Although the project may increase carbon accumulation in the forest floor and in the mineral
soil, these increases have not been included in the carbon sequestration estimates for the following two
reasons: (1) the developers believe that accurate estimates cannot be made using the existing models, as
the model estimates are associated with a large range of uncertainty; (2) a study conducted on a site in
northeastern U.S. (the state of New Hampshire), similar to the project site, found that there was no
significant net increase in soil carbon in regenerated forest sites.
Because no direct carbon sequestration estimates are available for regenerated forests in the region, the
projections of carbon sequestration have been made using (1) an allometric approach (or regression
equations); (2) tables of tree biomass values and a yield table method to calculate biological productivity
of stands with different age and species composition; and (3) data collected from reforested sites in the
region, naturally regenerated sites in the near-by regions, and comparable sites in North America.
More specifically, the methodology used for developing carbon sequestration projections involves the
following four steps: (1) regression equations are developed by regressing the weight and annual production
of biomass of pine stands in another region, by age on measurements of tree height, and tree diameter at
breast height; (2) biomass indices on height and diameter of trees, by age and species, are developed using
Utkin’s tables of tree biomass values and a yield table method developed by Isaev et al. (1993); (3)
the coefficients of the regression equations are applied to the indices of tree height and diameter to
compute biomass estimates; and (4) carbon sequestration estimates are derived by multiplying biomass
estimates by the following biomass to carbon conversion indices: 0.5 kg of carbon per kg of dry wood tree
parts and roots, and 0.45 kg of carbon per kg of dry needles and leaves.
Based on the above methodology and assumptions, the developers project that the carbon sequestration will
be about 2.0 t C/ha-yr (=1.5 t C/ha-yr from aboveground biomass growth + 0.45 t C/ha-yr(= 1.5 t C/ha-yr *
30%) through belowground biomass accumulation. Although the annual forest growth is expected to be less in
the first ten years of the project, time-dependent rates of carbon sequestration have not yet been
incorporated into the GHG calculations.
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Description of Calculation Methodology for the Actual Project
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This information is not yet available.
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3. GHG emission/sequestration data
(a) Reporting of GHG emissions/sequestration
(b) Additional information on GHG emissions/sequestration
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Indirect or Secondary GHG Impacts (Positive and Negative)
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This information is not yet available.
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Factors That Could Cause the Future Loss or Reversal of GHG Benefits
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The risk of forest fires or other natural disasters in Vologda is considered to be small. It is estimated
that less than .02% of the forested area in Vologda was damaged by fire between 1984 and 1993, and that
less than half of that was damaged by blight or disease during the same period. Although there are many
uncertainties in the economic and political development path of the Russia Federation as a whole, the
project developers believe that the economy of the Vologda region is economically better off than the rest
of the country and that the regional government is relatively stable. Therefore, the possibility of future
loss or reversal of GHG benefits is considered unlikely.
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Strategy for Reducing the Risk of Future Loss or Reversal of GHG Benefits
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Insurance options are currently being explored. A project reserve fund is budgeted to be used to pay for
insurance. The possibility of pooling proposed JI projects in the Russian Federation in a co-insurance
scheme is also being discussed.
Insurance measures include securing popular support through a public relations and public education
campaign in cooperation and consultation with the environmental protection officials in Vologda. Such a
campaign will include (1) using articles published in the local newspapers on the subject of FCCC and Joint
Implementation, (2) preparing a brochure about the project and distributing it among local schools and
institutions, and (3) holding a competition for local journalists on the topic of this reforestation
project in Vologda.
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F. Funding of the AIJ project
1. Identification of funding sources
(a) Funding sources for project development
This information is not yet available.
(b) Funding sources for project implementation
Currently no funds are available.
2. Assessment of additional funding needs
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Current or Planned Activities to Obtain Additional Funding
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Private sector funding is being sought in return for carbon offsets generated by the project. A proposal
has been submitted to the Utility Forestry Carbon Management Program of the Edison Electric Institute. A
proposal has also been submitted to another private agency for financing.
In addition, to attract financing for this project, the project developers are planning to offer the
potential investors of this project an option to buy carbon credits at a low price from an additional 2,000
ha of land, proposed to be reforested using funding from the Global Environment Facility (GEF). A proposal
is also being prepared by the CEE for a biodiversity grant from GEF to remove an additional 2,000 ha of
contiguous hay fields from production to allow reforestation. If this occurs, those that finance this
project might be offered the option to buy the carbon credits generated from the additional 2,000 hectares.
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G. Contribution to capacity building and technology transfer
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Contribution to Capacity Building and Technology Transfer
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Scientific cooperation between the Russian Federation and the U.S.A. is expected to be fostered through the
project’s cooperative monitoring.
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H. Recent developments, technical difficulties, and obstacles encountered
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Recent Project Developments
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This information is not yet available.
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Technical Difficulties and Other Obstacles Encountered
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This information is not yet available.
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I. Additional information
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Additional Information
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This information is not yet available.
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J. Annex
1. Host country acceptance of the AIJ project
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Country/Project Title
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Name, Title, and Government Agency of the Designated National Authority
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Date of Approval(day/month/year)
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Reforestation in Vologda, Russia
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Interagency Commission of the Russian Federation on Climate Change Problems
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27 November 1996
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2. Letters of approval of this AIJ project report
See attached concurrence form.
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