The Economic Benefits of the New Climate Economy in Rural America

Endnotes

  1. 1Environmental justice communities are those most impacted by environmental risks and harms. They face a disproportionate exposure to environmental hazards.
  2. 2While the full federal investment and corresponding economic benefits for the new climate economy were modeled over a five-year period, the land sector pathways (including tree restoration on federal lands, tree restoration on non-federal lands, and wildfire risk mitigation) offer the opportunity for more extended federal investment and economic benefits. The benefits for these pathways were modeled over a 20-year period. For all pathways, annual job creation and other economic benefits would be expected to extend for as long as federal investments continue.
  3. 3The REAP program offers guaranteed loans and grants to rural businesses and farms for qualifying energy projects, including wind, solar, and biomass generation.
  4. 4Land is deemed suitable for reforestation where significant forest cover occurred prior to European settlement but current canopy cover is less than 25 percent, as described by Cook-Patton et al. (2020). Forest land is deemed suitable for restocking where canopy cover exceeds 25 percent (to avoid double-counting with reforestation opportunities) but current basal area stocking levels are below 60 percent, the minimum level at which the U.S. Forest Service considers forest land to be fully stocked.
  5. 5We estimated the potential for carbon removal from tree restoration using methods consistent with Mulligan et al. (2020). Potential from reforestation was derived from Cook-Patton et al. (2020), while potential from restocking uses area data from the U.S. Forest Service (2021), sequestration rates from Hoover and Heath (2011), and additional potential estimates from Sohngen (2018). Mulligan et al. (2020) estimate the full opportunity for carbon removal to be achievable within 20 years, so we estimated the potential in 2030 to be one-half of the full opportunity.
  6. 6We assessed suitability for reforestation and restocking opportunities and their corresponding carbon removal potential in the same way as for tree restoration on federal lands. We assumed pasture land was suitable for silvopasture wherever it historically supported forest cover (Cook-Patton et al. 2020), with the carbon removal potential estimated using sequestration factors from COMET-Planner (Swan et al. 2015). We determined land suitability and carbon removal potential associated with other agroforestry systems, such as alley cropping and windbreaks, according to the methodology from Fargione et al. (2018).
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