Workshop on "Quantifying and managing land use impacts of bioenergy"
Tasks 38, 40 and 43 jointly organized a workshop on land use impact of bioenergy in Campinas, Brazil on September 19-21 2011.
Please download the final workshop program [659 KB]
Also (almost) all presentations are now available for download - we are trying tuo add the missing ones as soon as possible. The presentations have been bundled per session as zip -files.
(Plenary) session 1 [4.382 KB]
(Parallel) session 2a [11.211 KB]
(Parallel) session 2b [10.656 KB]
(Parallel) session 3a [17.695 KB]
(Parallel) session 3b [13.135 KB]
(Plenary) session 4 [17.481 KB]
Posters [17.481 KB]
Workshop rationale and aim
In the past decades, the production biomass for energy in agriculture and forestry has increased in many parts of the world. For years to come, further increase in land use for bioenergy will be needed to meet the renewable energy ambitions of many countries, and to reduce fossil fuel use and associated GHG emissions. As many industrialized countries have a limited biomass production potential compared to their prospective demand, it is expected that substantial international bioenergy trade will develop in the coming decades where regions such as Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa will produce feedstocks for both domestic consumption and for export.
Increasing the production and energetic use of biomass has many direct and indirect effects, including land-use related GHG emissions, impacts on biodiversity, and other environmental and social effects. However, while much of the recent years of debate has concerned negative effects, it is important to note that bioenergy expansion can also lead to positive environmental and socio-economic outcomes.
This workshop aimed to bring together current state-of-the-art research concerned with assessing land use effects of bioenergy, mitigating negative impacts, and promoting attractive ways forward.
The workshop addressed the following themes: * Quantifying Land Use and Land Use Change effects of bioenergy * Methods for estimating land use and land use change - modeling and other approaches * Effects of bioenergy systems on GHG emissions, carbon flows * Other effects of bioenergy (soil, water, biodiversity, social) * Integrating land use change effects in broader assessment frameworks
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