Following are abbreviations and terms used in the Minnesota Forest Carbon Baseline and Life Cycle Assessment Dashboard to characterize different forestry and greenhouse gas modeling concepts.
Abbreviations
ac |
acre |
BAU |
Business as usual |
CA |
Climate-adapted |
CO2 |
Carbon dioxide |
CO2-eq |
Carbon dioxide equivalent |
Econ |
Economic intensive |
EOL |
End-of-Life |
FIA |
Forest Inventory and Analysis |
HW |
Hardwood |
HWD |
Hazardous waste disposed |
HWP |
Harvested wood product |
kg |
Kilogram |
LCA |
Life Cycle Assessment |
MMT |
million metric tons |
MMtn |
million metric tons |
Mt |
metric tons |
OSB |
Oriented Strandboard |
SW |
Softwood |
SWDS |
Solid waste disposal sites |
Tonne |
metric ton |
Glossary
Aboveground biomass. All living biomass above the soil including stems, stumps, branches, bark, seeds, and foliage (Domke et al. 2023).
Belowground biomass. All living biomass of coarse living roots with diameters greater than 2 millimeters (Domke et al. 2023).
Basal area. The cross-sectional area of woody stems growing within an area of interest. Basal Area is typically expressed in square feet of cross-section area per acre.
Biomass. Organic material, living or dead, such as trees, crops, grasses, tree litter, and roots (Russell et al. 2022).
Carbon flux. The measurement of change in forest carbon stock between two time periods. Also called “net carbon flux” (Minnesota DNR 2023).
Carbon pool. A part of a system that can store, accumulate, or release carbon. Five carbon pools are commonly used to describe forest carbon pools: aboveground biomass, belowground biomass, soil, litter, and dead wood (Domke et al. 2023).
Carbon sequestration. The process by which trees and other plants use carbon dioxide and photosynthesis to store carbon as plant biomass.
Carbon storage/stock. The amount of carbon in a tree or forest. Reflects a physical amount of carbon that is the result of sequestration.
CO2-eq/Carbon dioxide equivalent/CO2 equivalent. Unit for comparing the radiative forcing of a greenhouse gas to that of carbon dioxide (ISO 14067).
Cradle to Gate. Covers the mandatory production stage that includes the following information modules: extraction and upstream production (raw material supply), transport to factory and manufacturing (ISO 21930:2017).
Embodied carbon. The global warming impact of all the greenhouse gas emissions through production of the product. Usually displayed in mass of CO2 equivalents (e.g., kg CO2-eq.)
Emission. Release of carbon into the atmosphere.
End of Life. Used to refer to harvested wood products that have reached the end of their intended use such as discarded, recycled or repurposed wood.
HWP In-Service. Harvested wood products that are currently in use and are storing carbon.
Life cycle assessment (LCA). Compilation and evaluation of the inputs, outputs, and the potential environmental impacts of a product system throughout its life cycle (14040:2006/Amd1:2020).
Life cycle inventory (LCI). Phase of life cycle assessment involving the compilation and quantification of inputs and outputs for a product throughout its life cycle (14040:2006/Amd1:2020).
Life cycle impact assessment (LCIA). Phase of life cycle assessment aimed at understanding and evaluating the magnitude and significance of the potential environmental impacts for a product system throughout the life cycle of the product (14040:2006/Amd1:2020).
Leakage. Accounts for likely carbon outcomes of making the choice to reduce or eliminate management from Minnesota’s forests and the likelihood that harvest will then be shifted to another region to meet timber demand.
Soil carbon. All organic material in soil to a depth of 1 meter but excluding the coarse roots of the belowground pools.
Substitution. The difference between functionally equivalent materials (e.g., steel stud vs wood stud) measured in carbon equivalents.
For a complete list of abbreviations and glossary for the Minnesota forest carbon research project, see the project report: “Estimating current and future carbon stocks and emissions in Minnesota forest and forest products under multiple management scenarios” Section 8: Appendices.