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Lowering Emissions in Asia’s Forests (LEAF) Program
Standard Operating
Procedures for Terrestrial Carbon Measurement
This manual provides standardized field measurements, based on proven field methods, for
quantifying carbon emissions and removals from changes in the use and management of lands.
These procedures are a key component of a quality assurance and quality control plan needed to
provide confidence in results of climate mitigation activities.
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
USAID, along with the U.S. Department of State, spends approximately $90 million annually to reduce
deforestation, increase sequestration, and enhance sustainable forest management. Some
examples of USAID programs include:
- Spending $30 million annually for conservation in the Amazon, including the Initiative for
Conservation in the Andean Amazon and over $100 million since 2002 to targeted conservation
programs as part of the Congo Basin Forest Partnership.
- Working with the Center for International Forestry (CIFOR) to create a suite of training
modules on topics related to forests and climate change, including modules on carbon accounting,
forest management, trading carbon from forests, and international policy.
- Assessing forest conservation and natural resources management programs – in countries
such as Indonesia, Liberia and Bolivia – to see how they can be redesigned, to better
incorporate forest climate practices and policies.
- Further information:
U.S. Forest Services (USFS)
USFS has developed research-based adaptation strategies, carbon sequestration models and a body of
collaborative resource management practices applied in more than fifty countries around the
world. Some of the relevant areas where the USFS is working:
- Reducing deforestation and restoring degraded lands;
- Improving the management and conservation of forests and grasslands;
- Fostering the use of sustainably produced wood for energy, and as a substitute for other more
energy-intensive materials; and
- Research, decision support tools and innovative policies for the future.
In the past year, the USFS has continued to develop robust partnerships around the world to address
the threat of climate change. USFS scientists are cooperating with the Center for International
Forestry Research (CIFOR) to quantify the contribution of mangrove forests to carbon sequestration
and emissions. In collaboration with the International Union of Forest Research Organizations
(IUFRO) and the UN Food & Agriculture Organization (FAO), the USFS helped sponsor a large
conference in Sweden focusing on the challenge of adapting forests ecosystems and dependent
communities to climate change. Finally, the USFS is providing technical support to World Bank FCPF
recipient countries such as Liberia, Vietnam and Mexico and other bilateral partners to improve
inventory and forest management systems in order to advance global efforts at reducing emissions
from deforestation and forest degradation.
USFS website on climate
change and forests
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
EPA is helping developing countries build national inventory management systems and offers two sets
of tools, consistent with UNFCCC reporting guidelines and available through the web-link below.
- National System Templates that can accommodate varying levels of national capacity and
documents and institutionalize the inventory management process.
- Targeted data collection strategies and software tools to assist developing countries in moving
to higher Tier IPCC methods.
In particular, the U.S. EPA—along with USAID and the University of Colorado—is working
with forest inventory teams in developing countries to enhance technical capacity and develop
sustainable inventory management systems. This work has included development of a software tool
that provides support for estimating the majority of emissions and removals from Land Use, Land Use
Change and Forestry and Agriculture. Thus far, the program has assisted 7 Central American
countries and is currently working with 6 Southeast Asian countries on their national greenhouse
gas inventories for land use, land use change and forestry, and agriculture.
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)
USGS has a record of partnerships with developing countries studying land use, resource management,
and climate related issues. The international science team at the USGS' Earth Resources
Observation and Science Center (EROS) has cooperative projects with developing countries, using
satellite based data to monitor the changes to land cover features. Additionally, the North
American Node of UNEP GRID, located at the USGS EROS Center, is in the forefront of applying
information technology tools such as remote sensing, Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and web
mapping to address the relationships between the environment and human populations. Utilizing the
expert knowledge of staff and visiting scientists, the information created with these tools provide
policy-makers a scientific basis for making decisions.
USGS is also releasing satellite data at no cost. By the end of 2008 the entire archive of
data collected from the Landsat series, as far back as 1972 and current daily new acquisitions,
will be available over the Internet. This release will make land observation data available
to a global science community for monitoring land surface changes over a multi-decade period.
Download Landsat scenes:
- Using USGS Global Visualization Viewer
- Using Earth Explorer
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
NASA’s Land-cover and Land-Use Change (LCLUC) program within its Earth Science Enterprise
seeks to further the scientific understanding of the consequences of land-cover and land-use change
for continued provision of ecological goods and services, the carbon and water cycles and the
management of natural resources. It uses NASA’s remote sensing technology to monitor
global land cover change and improve understanding of human interaction with the environment, and
thus provide a scientific foundation for sustainability, vulnerability and resilience of land
systems and their use.
NASA LCLUC is also involved in a joint initiative with the US Geological Survey (USGS), called the
“Global Land Survey” (GLS). Moderate resolution (c. 30m) data are useful for
monitoring forest change, but the cost of using such data has been prohibitively high for some
resources managers and scientists working in tropical forest countries. GLS will make freely
available a global time-series of moderate resolution satellite data, preprocessed to be directly
comparable between dates (orthorectified) for studying forest and land cover change.
Currently NASA and USGS are generating a data set for c. 2005, which will complement previous
global data sets for 1980, 1990, and 2000. The plan for the 2010 data set is to develop this
into an international initiative in the framework of the Group on Earth Observations (GEO), by
including data from various international satellites of similar resolution. Partnerships are
currently being sought for this international collaboration.
NASA LCLUC also supports several large regional science campaigns and programs, including the Large
Scale Biosphere-Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia, the Central African Regional Program for the
Environment, the Northern Eurasian Earth Science Partnership Initiative, and the Monsoon Asia
Integrated Regional Study. LCLUC is also a contributor to the international Global
Observation of Forest and Land Cover Dynamics (GOFC-GOLD) program, a project of the Global
Terrestrial Observing System (GTOS).
NASA's LCLUC program
U.S. Department of The Treasury
The Tropical Forest Conservation Act allows eligible developing countries to relieve official debt
owed to the U.S. Government while generating funds to support tropical forest conservation
programs. The U.S. Department of the Treasury negotiates and oversees these agreements
together with the US Department of State and the US Agency for International Development. To
date the US has concluded 14 debt-for-nature agreements with 12 countries in Africa, Asia, and
Latin America, generating $188 million over 10-25 years to help conserve more than 20 million
hectares of tropical forests.
U.S. Department of State
(a) The U.S. State Department promotes international dialogue, cooperation and policy development
to strengthen forest law enforcement and governance. The State Department is a lead
agency—working with USAID, the U.S. Forest Service, and the U.S. Trade
Representative—for the United States Initiative Against Illegal Logging, which helps
countries combat illegal logging and the export of illegally harvested timber and timber
products. The initiative focuses on the Congo and Amazon Basins, and South and Southeast
Asia, identifying and reducing threats from illegal logging by promoting transparent markets and
strengthening legal regimes, enforcement of forest laws, community-based actions, and technology
transfer.
(b) The State Department is also supporting the World Bank’s Forest Carbon Partnership
Facility, as a means to build “readiness” for countries who want to reduce their
emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD). The Facility will also test
methodologies to provide “positive incentives” for REDD.
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