OUTCOME: Climate Action

Problem

Reducing emissions alone will not avert climate change as CO2 in the atmosphere is already at the highest level since human civilization began. In order to avoid or limit the worst effects from climate change, carbon must be actively removed from the atmosphere and stored in a stable form, and existing carbon stores must be protected.

Solution

Carbon Sequestration & Storage - Develop and implement a regional plan for carbon sequestration and storage consistent with the state's climate policies and plans.

Background and Context

Natural and working lands are a potential carbon sink, but can also become a carbon source – due to agricultural practices, wildfire, land use conversion, ecosystem type conversion, or unsustainable timber harvests. The North Coast region has a high percentage of forested land. Avoiding the conversion of forest to other land use or land cover types, whether by development or by wildfire, and managing forests for carbon sequestration and storage is one of the most effective ways to ensure that forests remain net carbon sinks rather than becoming sources of GHG emissions. In addition to carbon sequestration and storage, forests provide wildlife habitat, water filtration, and recreational and economic opportunities for local communities. Historic western forest management practices, from clearcutting and plantation reforestation to fire suppression, and climate change impacts – including drought and insect infestations – have made forests less healthy and more vulnerable to destructive wildfires. Unhealthy, dense forests dominated by a single species lack biodiversity and sequester less carbon than healthy forests with species-rich ecosystems. Biodiverse forests protect traditional cultural resources and landscapes at risk from climate change.

Industrial agriculture is a major source of carbon emissions, with its high use of fossil-fuel powered machines, monocrops, and practices that mine the soil of carbon and other nutrients. Replacing nutrients with chemical fertilizer and spraying herbicides, pesticides, and fungicides to control unwanted species also contribute to industrial agriculture’s carbon emissions. By contrast, agroecology applies lessons from both western science and from traditional and Indigenous cropping systems from around the world to create more diversity, including multiple perennial species, multi-story cropping, grazing animals, use of cover crops and green manures, and other practices that support soil carbon and greater biodiversity than industrial agriculture. Restoration of pre-industrial agricultural and land management practices and research into new ways to grow crops more sustainably has led to potential improvements in agriculture practices, including carbon farming and agroforestry. Carbon farming seeks to maintain and increase the carbon stored in productive soils by minimizing tillage, using cover crops, and incorporating grazing animals, trees, or other perennial crops. Agroforestry incorporates trees along with other annual and perennial crops and grazing, creating diverse, multi-layered systems with increased biodiversity and stored carbon, both above and below ground. Agroforestry may provide an especially appropriate set of practices in areas designated as shaded fuel breaks or buffer areas around rural communities, and can provide both ecological and economic benefits to farmers and to community members. Potential benefits include food security, local biodiversity, carbon sequestration in soils and above-ground biomass, economic diversification for farmers, and cost-effective maintenance of defensible space around communities.

Climate change, drought, and pressure to reduce fossil fuels and agricultural chemicals that damage the environment make some currently farmed lands less viable for farming in the future. These lands could be remediated through a shift from intensive farming to carbon farming, incorporating practices that treat carbon sequestered in the soils as a crop and compensating farmers for “growing” carbon, through various market mechanisms, such as carbon credit or carbon offset programs. Abandoned or marginal agricultural lands are also excellent places for habitat restoration or afforestation, one of the best ways to sequester and store carbon.

Recommendations

As part of its ongoing, comprehensive adaptive plan for ecosystem and community health and resilience, NCRP will develop and support implementation of a regional plan to ensure that the region continues to serve as a critical carbon sink in support of statewide efforts to sequester and store carbon in natural and working lands. A key priority is preventing conversion of existing carbon sinks through climate smart land use planning, as well as protection of cultural landscapes and conservation of natural and working lands through zoning, conservation easements, and other tools.

NCRP will work with partners to develop and implement plans and projects to increase the amount of carbon stored in North Coast forests by improving forest management to protect stands with large trees and reduce the risk of stand-replacing fires. Partners will work to increase the carbon stored in grassland soils by improving grazing techniques, applying compost and biochar, and using beneficial fire. Partners, including UCCE, will support the use of carbon farming and agroforestry in the North Coast region by supporting research, education, and outreach efforts about the benefits of carbon farming and agroforestry to farmers and ranchers as well as the benefits of improving ecosystem health and carbon sequestration.

NCRP will support Tribes in increasing co-management of public lands in their ancestral homelands and repatriating lands via various voluntary mechanisms, including working with land trusts and public agencies to transfer lands back to Tribes. NCRP will support the restoration, enhancement, and protection of cultural resources, traditional foods, and cultural landscapes and support Tribal use of Indigenous knowledge and practice and TEK. Plans will prioritize forested areas for long-term protection of carbon resources, using TEK and other land conservation and ecological restoration strategies. Technical assistance will support local Tribes and private landowners in protecting and managing their forests for carbon sequestration and storage (see Ecosystem Conservation and Restoration – Private Landowner Solution).

Actions

Develop, refine, and update climate related datasets, including regional carbon mapping to indicate where carbon is currently stored in the North Coast region and where there is potential for additional sequestration and storage.

Map and conserve established and potential climate change refugia, considering migration, range shifts, and connectivity to support biodiversity.

Document the additional carbon sequestration and storage achieved by RFFC Plan actions.

Protect carbon sequestered in natural and working lands, including forests, grasslands, riparian areas, wetlands, etc. by protecting these lands from development via conservation easements, zoning, or other land use or land management tools (see Ecosystem Conservation & Restoration – Land Conservation Solution).

Develop and support actions, plans, and policies that improve the health of currently forested lands and increase their ability to sequester and store carbon, as well as actions, plans, and policies that increase carbon sequestration by reforestation and afforestation (see Ecosystem Conservation & Restoration: Planning Solution).

Ensure that historically disadvantaged communities, including Tribal communities, benefit from planned carbon sequestration and storage actions, and that equity, environmental justice, and representation are key components of all planning efforts.

Develop Forest Carbon Offset Project templates modeled on Redwood Forest Foundation’s Usal Forest Carbon Project; document the steps to facilitate development of similar projects across the region. Build best management practices and safeguards into these models.

  • Protect agricultural lands from development through conservation easements and other mechanisms (i.e., purchase, Williamson Act, etc.).
  • Provide outreach, financial assistance, and technical assistance to farmers – with an emphasis on farmers from traditionally underserved and disadvantaged groups – to scale up soil health practices for carbon storage, climate resilience, methane capture, soil water retention, improved water and air quality, integrated pest management, biodiversity, and more. Potential practices include cover cropping, production and application of organic amendments such as compost, hedgerows, grass filter strips, minimum or no-till, and incorporation of livestock for managed grazing.
  • Develop more comprehensive climate vulnerability assessments for agricultural lands that integrate biophysical and environmental stressors, heat, drought, pests and diseases, and socioeconomic factors.
  • Promote and assist with the development of comprehensive farm management plans, such as whole-farm conservation plans, carbon farm plans, and organic system plans to help farmers increase water and nutrient use efficiency; plant water-wise crops to decrease reliance on large amounts of water, install climate smart irrigation systems; etc.
  • Encourage groundwater recharge practices on working croplands that capture rain and storm runoff as well as redirect water during periods of extended high flows to allow water to sink into aquifers in a manner that does not exacerbate water quality issues and ensures diversions are protective of native fish and wildlife.
  • Help farmers develop conservation easements that repurpose cropland retired or fallowed due to lack of water supply for environmental, cultural, and societal benefits, such as sequestering carbon, capturing floodwater, recharging aquifers, reducing dust, and providing habitat.
  • Help create circular economies for organic waste utilization, including manure and biomass through compost utilization, manure markets, whole orchard recycling, mulch utilization, and the use of biochar from forest fuel management on agricultural lands.
  • Assist Tribes to expand utilization of CDFA Climate Smart Agriculture Incentive Programs and other grant programs to facilitate planting, harvesting, and sustaining culturally and historically significant food crops.
  • Support ordinances to increase required riparian setbacks on agricultural lands and develop assistance programs to reactivate flood plains on working croplands to improve flood resilience and aquifer recharge as well as enhance biodiversity.
  • Advance safer, more sustainable pest management practices and tools to support the accelerated transition away from harmful pesticides.
  • Advocate for and support the use of grazing and other agroforestry practices to create and maintain multi-benefit buffers and fuel breaks around vulnerable communities, including the use of Stewardship Contracts for grazing management on public lands.
  • Work with grassland owners to heal gullies, restore wet meadow hydrology, and promote the restoration of native grass species and wetland adapted native plants.

Investigate the feasibility of regional participation in a Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS) project – carbon sequestration from electricity generation derived by combusting biomass and combined with carbon capture and storage (see Fire Resilient Forests – Forest Biomass Residuals Solution).