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A multi-data assessment of land use and land cover emissions from Brazil during 2000–2019

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posted on 2025-08-01, 14:19 authored by TM Rosan, KK Goldewijk, R Ganzenmüller, M O’Sullivan, J Pongratz, LM Mercado, LEOC Aragao, V Heinrich, C Von Randow, A Wiltshire, FN Tubiello, A Bastos, P Friedlingstein, S Sitch
Brazil is currently the largest contributor of land use and land cover change (LULCC) carbon dioxide net emissions worldwide, representing 17%-29% of the global total. There is, however, a lack of agreement among different methodologies on the magnitude and trends in LULCC emissions and their geographic distribution. Here we perform an evaluation of LULCC datasets for Brazil, including those used in the annual global carbon budget (GCB), and national Brazilian assessments over the period 2000-2018. Results show that the latest global HYDE 3.3 LULCC dataset, based on new FAO inventory estimates and multi-annual ESA CCI satellite-based land cover maps, can represent the observed spatial variation in LULCC over the last decades, representing an improvement on the HYDE 3.2 data previously used in GCB. However, the magnitude of LULCC assessed with HYDE 3.3 is lower than estimates based on MapBiomas. We use HYDE 3.3 and MapBiomas as input to a global bookkeeping model (bookkeeping of land use emission, BLUE) and a process-based Dynamic Global Vegetation Model (JULES-ES) to determine Brazil's LULCC emissions over the period 2000-2019. Results show mean annual LULCC emissions of 0.1-0.4 PgC yr-1, compared with 0.1-0.24 PgC yr-1 reported by the Greenhouse Gas Emissions Estimation System of land use changes and forest sector (SEEG/LULUCF) and by FAO in its latest assessment of deforestation emissions in Brazil. Both JULES-ES and BLUE now simulate a slowdown in emissions after 2004 (-0.006 and -0.004 PgC yr-2 with HYDE 3.3, -0.014 and -0.016 PgC yr-2 with MapBiomas, respectively), in agreement with the Brazilian INPE-EM, global Houghton and Nassikas book-keeping models, FAO and as reported in the 4th national greenhouse gas inventories. The inclusion of Earth observation data has improved spatial representation of LULCC in HYDE and thus model capability to simulate Brazil's LULCC emissions. This will likely contribute to reduce uncertainty in global LULCC emissions, and thus better constrains GCB assessments.

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©2021TheAuthor(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd. Open access. Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.

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This is the final version. Available on open access from IOP Publishing via the DOI in this record Data availability statement: The data that support the findings of this study are available upon reasonable request from the authors.

Journal

Environmental Research Letters

Pagination

074004-

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2022-04-12T12:28:58Z

FOA date

2022-04-12T12:30:56Z

Citation

Vol. 16(7), article 074004

Department

  • Mathematics and Statistics

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