Understanding values beyond carbon in the Woodland Carbon Code in Scotland

Many governments and organisations are encouraging carbon dioxide capture in woodlands through the creation of markets that commodify forest carbon. These schemes can connect different values in local landscapes and global environmental responses to climate change, which go beyond increasing the cos...

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Main Authors: James Koronka, Paola Ovando, Jo Vergunst
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022-09-01
Series:Trees, Forests and People
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666719322001273
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author James Koronka
Paola Ovando
Jo Vergunst
author_facet James Koronka
Paola Ovando
Jo Vergunst
author_sort James Koronka
collection DOAJ
description Many governments and organisations are encouraging carbon dioxide capture in woodlands through the creation of markets that commodify forest carbon. These schemes can connect different values in local landscapes and global environmental responses to climate change, which go beyond increasing the cost-effectiveness of carbon offsetting. In this paper we use the UK Woodland Carbon Code (WCC) to explore the values and meanings brought to the WCC by landowners, forest developers and carbon buyers, with a focus on Scotland. Our analysis presents quantitative and qualitative evidence of different values coexisting among the participants of the WCC, accommodating both conservation oriented woodland expansion projects and those driven by income diversification. The former mainly use non-commercial native broadleaf species and the latter combine commercial non-native conifer plantation with different levels of native broadleaves whilst remaining non-viable economically. WCC participants convey different values and meanings of forest carbon, transcending commodity value as tradeable offsets to encompass other environmental and social outcomes. We argue that the WCC works by encoding and enabling the exchange of different values, which for proponents is a positive feature that captures the diverse co-benefits of woodland. Critics of carbon offsets, meanwhile, may see these shifts in value as a form of greenwashing that benefits carbon buyers. We argue that research into the effects of carbon offset schemes should incorporate both material and symbolic processes that go beyond carbon itself.
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spelling doaj.art-2c65d16123b3443ca5beba2f0e82c9a12022-12-22T02:16:05ZengElsevierTrees, Forests and People2666-71932022-09-019100320Understanding values beyond carbon in the Woodland Carbon Code in ScotlandJames Koronka0Paola Ovando1Jo Vergunst2Independent researcher, Cumbria, UKInstitute of Public Goods and Policies (IPP), The Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Madrid, Spain; Social, Economic and Geographical Sciences Department, The James Hutton Institute, Aberdeen, UK; Corresponding author at: Institute of Public Goods and Policies (IPP), The Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Madrid, SpainDepartment of Anthropology, University of Aberdeen, Dunbar Street, Aberdeen AB24 3QY, UK; Corresponding author.Many governments and organisations are encouraging carbon dioxide capture in woodlands through the creation of markets that commodify forest carbon. These schemes can connect different values in local landscapes and global environmental responses to climate change, which go beyond increasing the cost-effectiveness of carbon offsetting. In this paper we use the UK Woodland Carbon Code (WCC) to explore the values and meanings brought to the WCC by landowners, forest developers and carbon buyers, with a focus on Scotland. Our analysis presents quantitative and qualitative evidence of different values coexisting among the participants of the WCC, accommodating both conservation oriented woodland expansion projects and those driven by income diversification. The former mainly use non-commercial native broadleaf species and the latter combine commercial non-native conifer plantation with different levels of native broadleaves whilst remaining non-viable economically. WCC participants convey different values and meanings of forest carbon, transcending commodity value as tradeable offsets to encompass other environmental and social outcomes. We argue that the WCC works by encoding and enabling the exchange of different values, which for proponents is a positive feature that captures the diverse co-benefits of woodland. Critics of carbon offsets, meanwhile, may see these shifts in value as a form of greenwashing that benefits carbon buyers. We argue that research into the effects of carbon offset schemes should incorporate both material and symbolic processes that go beyond carbon itself.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666719322001273Woodland expansionVoluntary forest carbon marketsValues codificationMixed qualitative and quantitative research methods
spellingShingle James Koronka
Paola Ovando
Jo Vergunst
Understanding values beyond carbon in the Woodland Carbon Code in Scotland
Trees, Forests and People
Woodland expansion
Voluntary forest carbon markets
Values codification
Mixed qualitative and quantitative research methods
title Understanding values beyond carbon in the Woodland Carbon Code in Scotland
title_full Understanding values beyond carbon in the Woodland Carbon Code in Scotland
title_fullStr Understanding values beyond carbon in the Woodland Carbon Code in Scotland
title_full_unstemmed Understanding values beyond carbon in the Woodland Carbon Code in Scotland
title_short Understanding values beyond carbon in the Woodland Carbon Code in Scotland
title_sort understanding values beyond carbon in the woodland carbon code in scotland
topic Woodland expansion
Voluntary forest carbon markets
Values codification
Mixed qualitative and quantitative research methods
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666719322001273
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