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Watering the West

This project protects roughly half a million acres of the most biologically diverse regions in the Pacific Northwest which protect the California Watershed.


Why we chose this project:


“Forests along America’s west coast experience extensive harvesting due to the demands of the lumber market, despite their value to America’s west-coast water supply. Poorly managed forests are more susceptible to wildfires, and as climate change increases droughts, these two natural disasters form a vicious cycle. These forests provide habitat to a diverse range of species and contribute to water supply and air quality and are of particular importance to protect and manage properly. Projects like Klamath East Improved Forest Management play a unique role by protecting the forests and sustainably meeting the future market demand for resources.”

– Sid Yadav, Director of Project Research


The Cool Effect Model:


Project Type: Nature-Based Removal

Carbon Standard: ACR & CARB compliance

Vintage: 2018-2019

Additionality: Without this project, the project would be logged and continuously degraded.

Permanence: Long-term monitoring activities to ensure that carbon stocks are maintained at high levels for the 100-year period following the 25-year crediting period.

Site Visit: Q3 2021 





What it does:


Covering almost 2 million acres of land and with peaks ranging from 900-9,000 feet in elevation combined with 200 miles of roaring rivers, the Klamath National Forest is one of America’s most biologically diverse regions. Ponderosa Pines dominate the lower elevations before the Douglas fir, sub-alpine fir, and mixed conifer species collectively conquer steeper peaks. Wild horses and elk herds roam the trees while bears, deer, river otters, and minks reside on the banks. Coho salmon and steelhead populations swim the rivers while osprey and bald eagles soar the skies. Because of Klamath’s proximity to other mountain ranges, the Forest experiences unique climate patterns, resulting in more plant life diversity than anywhere else in California.

Since more than 30 species of conifers inhabit Klamath, the National Forest has been a historic hot spot for logging. Clear-cutting was common practice for the project area, resulting in high harvest levels and reduced carbon stock levels, defined as the amount of carbon contained in a system that can accumulate or release carbon. The carbon stock levels were significantly lower than the current Forest Industry and Analysis (FIA) common practice statistic.

Green Diamond Resource Company is the new owner of the project area (402,349 acres) and that of its sister project, the Klamath West IFM project (630,000). Green Diamond is changing tactics and relying on carbon finance to incentivize sustainable management techniques to restore carbon stocks over the 25-year crediting period. Green Diamond plans to apply practices, including thinning. Thinning plays a particularly important role because it:

  • Reduces risk of catastrophic pest/disease outbreaks, and wildfire destruction.
  • Boosts overall annual water yields, since more snow falls to the ground, increasing groundwater and increasing water yields later into the dry season.
  • Strengthens river flows on a seasonal basis, which improves the conditions for not only the river ecosystem but also downstream communities’ water supplies.

Other than the plant and animal biodiversity, the Klamath National Forest’s rivers and watersheds supply California with much-needed water. 75% of the project area is within the Klamath River Watershed Basin and the 120 watersheds within the project area will be protected by forest regeneration. It is no surprise that the California Air Resources Board cited that the project demonstrates “direct environmental benefits in the state of California.”


Benefits:


  • Reduced forest fragmentation contributes to improved water quality for both the Klamath and Sacramento watershed basins.
  • Longer harvesting cycles (extending the rotation age and time) results in decreased human disturbances from logging activities.
  • Protecting the watershed results in protecting salmon and steelhead stocks.
  • Increasing the average age of trees across the project area improves air quality since a larger tree canopy removes pollutants.
  • Due to the rigidity of the applied methodology, the carbon stocks must be maintained at the same level for another 100 years.
  • Project activities include planting other native species to increase growth and restore biodiversity.

Challenges:


  • Wildfires have impacted Klamath National Forest and the project area historically.
  • Forests are always at risk to pests and disease.
  • As climate change increases the severity of droughts, a lack of water could impact the forecasted rates of carbon sequestration over the life of the project.
  • This project is a sustainable logging project, meaning that a certain percentage of the trees can be harvested throughout the project crediting period.
  • Regular stories for this project are likely not available due to the fact that the project exists only to increase biomass.

Project verifications

UN sustainable development goals

Drawdown

Drawdown is the most comprehensive plan to reverse global warming; Watering the West relates to Solutions Number 12 – Temperate Forest

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