Staff directory
Wannes Hubau
Biology
Wood biology
Wood biology
Publication details
Verbiest, W., Ewango, C., Makana, J-R., Lewis, S., Bauters, M., Bastin, J-F., Fayolle, A., Gorel, A-P. & Hubau, W. 2024. ‘Disentangling national carbon fluxes of African rainforest countries’. European Geosciences Union (EGU) General Assembly 2024. Book of abstracts.
Conference abstract
African tropical ecosystems possess great potential for nature-based solutions in mitigating fossil
fuel emissions through absorbing and storing carbon in soil and vegetation. However, past studies
mostly focused on pan-continental carbon balance quantification, often ignoring regional
differences. Remarkably, few science-informed attempts have been made to refine carbon flux
estimates at the national level within African rainforest countries. Yet, such refined estimates are
essential to improve the quantification of Nationally Determined Contributions for the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
In this contribution, we present preliminary results on quantifying national carbon budgets for
African rainforest countries by disentangling three major carbon fluxes for the period 2001-2015:
(1) net carbon uptake in tropical savannas, woodlands, and forests, (2) carbon losses from landuse change, and (3) fossil fuel emissions. Carbon fluxes in intact forests are quantified using
ground-based data1
, while the carbon uptake by intact savannas and woodlands is based on Net
Primary Productivity assessments estimated from remote sensing products2,3. Furthermore,
carbon emissions from land-use change are estimated by analyzing various satellite images and
related products providing data on land-use change4–6, soil and tree carbon stocks7–12, fire
emissions3,13,14, and carbon recovery in regrowing forests15–18 in tropical Africa. Country-level fossil
fuel emissions are taken from the Global Carbon Project database19 to complete the national
carbon balances.
We reveal that most Central and East African rainforest countries acted as net carbon sinks
between 2001 and 2015, while West African rainforest countries exhibited minimal net carbon
loss. Overall, tropical ecosystems have played an important role in mitigating carbon emissions
due to land-use change and fossil fuels in African rainforest countries, particularly in Congo Basin
countries. Our insights into nation-level carbon fluxes will be crucial for informing African
rainforest countries, guiding climate policies to stay on track to keep global warming well below
2°C.