Here is a brief (barely 10 pages - mostly tabes and charts) CRS report (updated 26 July 2022) by Katie Hoover and Anne A. Riddle: 'U.S. Forest Carbon Data - In Brief''.
Download CRS_Report_US_Forest_Carbon_Data_Brief_26July2022
I have pasted the entire document below (except for the footnotes). Click on the graphics to enlarge them.
Introduction
The flux—or flow—of carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere is the dominant contributor to the observed warming trend in global temperatures. Trees, however, store (sequester) CO2 from the atmosphere, accruing significant stores of carbon over time. Trees also release some CO2 back into the atmosphere (e.g., emissions). This process is known as the forest carbon cycle.
The forest carbon cycle starts with the sequestration and accumulation of atmospheric CO2 due to tree growth. The accumulated carbon is stored in five different pools in the forest ecosystem: aboveground biomass (e.g., leaves, trunks, and limbs), belowground biomass (e.g., roots), deadwood, litter (e.g., fallen leaves and stems), and soils. As trees or parts of trees die, the carbon cycles through those different pools, specifically from the living biomass pools to the deadwood, litter, and soil pools. The length of time carbon stays in each pool varies considerably, ranging from months (litter) to millennia (soil). The cycle continues as carbon flows out of the forest ecosystem and returns to the atmosphere through several processes, including respiration, combustion (e.g., fire), and decomposition. Carbon also leaves the forest ecosystem through timber harvests, by which it enters the product pool. This carbon is stored in harvested wood products (HWPs) while they are in use but eventually will return to the atmosphere upon the wood products’ disposal and eventual decomposition, which could take several decades or more. In total, there are seven pools of forest carbon: five in the forest ecosystem and two in the product pool (HWPs in use and HWPs in disposal sites).
Carbon is always moving through the pools of forested ecosystems. The size of the various pools and the rate at which carbon moves through them vary considerably over time. The amount of carbon sequestered in a forest relative to the amount of carbon released into the atmosphere is constantly changing with tree growth, death, and decomposition. If the total amount of carbon released into the atmosphere by a given forest over a given period is greater than the amount of carbon sequestered in that forest, the forest is a net source of carbon emissions to the atmosphere. If the forest sequesters more carbon than it releases into the atmosphere, the forest is a net sink of carbon.
These forest carbon dynamics are driven in large part by different anthropogenic and ecological disturbances. Anthropogenic disturbances are planned activities, such as timber harvests, whereas ecological disturbances are unplanned, such as weather events (e.g., hurricanes, ice storms, droughts), insect and disease infestations, and wildfires. Generally, disturbances result in tree mortality, causing the transfer of carbon from the living pools to the deadwood, litter, soil, and product pools, and/or eventually to the atmosphere. If a disturbed site regenerates as forest, the carbon releases caused by the disturbance generally are offset over time. If, however, the site changes to a different land use (e.g., agriculture), the carbon releases may not be offset.
Congressional debates over climate policy have often included ideas for optimizing carbon sequestration in forests as a potential mitigation strategy for global warming. To facilitate those debates, this report provides data on the amount of carbon that is stored in and flows through U.S. forests. Since the early 1990s, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has prepared an annual Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions (Inventory), which has included anaccounting of carbon in U.S. forests in the Land Use, Land-Use Change, and Forestry (LULUCF) sector. Estimates of forestland area and forest inventory data are used to estimate carbon stocks, or the amount of carbon stored in a pool. Carbon flux is then measured by comparing changes in forest carbon stocks over time. This report includes data for the most recent year available as well as data for every five years back to 1990, as available.
Figure 1 introduces some of the terms and units for measuring and reporting carbon that are used throughout this report. An accompanying report, CRS Report R46312,Forest Carbon Primer, addresses basic questions concerning carbon sequestration in forests and provides an overview of forest carbon accounting methodologies.
U.S. Forest Carbon Stocks
According to the Inventory, U.S. forests stored 61.0 billion metric tons (BMT) of carbon in 2021 (see Figure 2 and Table 1).4 The majority of forest carbon was stored in the forest ecosystem pools (96%); the remainder was stored in the product pool (i.e., harvested wood products, HWP). The largest pool of carbon was forest soils, which contained approximately 54% of total forest carbon in 2021. The next-largest pool was aboveground biomass, which contained approximately 26% of the total. Each of the other pools stored 6% or less of the total carbon.
Since 1990, U.S. forest carbon stocks have increased 10%. Nearly all forest pools have gained more carbon as of 2021. The exceptions are the litter and soil pools, which each continue to store around the same amount of carbon for each year of reported data. Although forest carbon stocks have increased, the rate of increase has slowed across recent years.
Since 1990, the size of U.S. forests has remained mostly constant. About one-third of the United States is forested. These forested areas vary considerably by location, climate, vegetation type, and disturbance histories, among other factors. Because of this variation, U.S. forests contain varying amounts of carbon stored in varying proportions across the different forest pools. Accordingly, the amount of carbon within a certain area, or carbon density, also varies.
Carbon Emissions and Sinks from U.S. Forests
Carbon flux is the net annual change in carbon stocks. The flux estimate for any given year (e.g., 2019) is the change between stock estimates for that year (2019) and the following year (2020). Negative flux values indicate more carbon was removed from the atmosphere and sequestered than was released in that year (e.g., net carbon sink); net negative flux is typically called net sequestration (or sometimes just sequestration). Positive flux values indicate more carbon was released than was sequestered in that year (e.g., net carbon source).
According to the Inventory, U.S. forests were a net carbon sink in 2020, having sequestered 767 MMT CO2 equivalents (or 209 MMT of carbon) that year (see Figure 3 for net sequestration by MMT CO2 equivalents, Table 2 for flux data by MMT CO2 equivalents, and Table 3 for flux data by MMT of carbon). This total represents an offset of approximately 13% of the gross greenhouse gas emissions from the United States in 2020.
The net sink reflects carbon accumulation on existing forestland and carbon accumulation associated with land converted to forestland within the past 20 years. Most of the sink is associated with existing forests (85%). Within the carbon pools, most of the flux is associated with aboveground biomass (59%). The carbon flux into the living biomass pools (above- and belowground) reflects net carbon accumulation from the atmosphere. The carbon flux into the other pools represents the movement of carbon from the living biomass pools into the nonliving pools (e.g., deadwood, litter), primarily through the decomposition process.
Although soils store significant amounts of carbon, the carbon accumulates slowly over long periods of time, so the annual flux is minimal. In some years, soils are a net source of carbon to the atmosphere. In some years, litter may be a net source to the atmosphere, particularly in years of increased wildfire activity. Overall, the annual net flux of carbon into U.S. forests is small relative to the amount of carbon forests store. For example, U.S. forests gained an additional 209 MMT of carbon between 2019 and 2020, but that represents only a 0.3% increase to the total forest carbon stock (61.0 BMT of carbon). In addition, the total stock of carbon stored in forests is equivalent to the sum of several decades of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions.
From 1990 to 2020, U.S. forests were a net carbon sink. However, the net amount of carbon sequestered by U.S. forests varies annually. As stated earlier, interannual variation depends largely on the size, duration, and severity of unplanned disturbances, which disrupt forest ecosystems. For example, wildfire activity in Alaska drives a significant portion of the interannual variability, due in part to fluctuations in the size of the area in the state affected by wildfire each year and because more of the carbon in Alaska is stored in pools (e.g., litter) that are likely to be combusted in a fire as compared to other states. Other factors influencing the net flux of carbon in U.S. forests over the time series include management activities (e.g., timber harvests) and land use trends (e.g., afforestation or deforestation).
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