• PRINT EDITIONS
  • | CONTACT
  • | TEL: 304.645.1206 | E: hello@wvdn.com
Wednesday, June 18, 2025
West Virginia Daily News
  • Home
  • News
  • Community
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
  • Government
    • All
    • City
    • County
    • State
    Governor Patrick Morrisey speaks during his press briefing on Wednesday, Jan. 29 after meeting with House and Senate leaders.

    Morrisey Sees Unique Opportunity to Grow West Virginia Economically

    Shelley Moore Capito

    Capito Votes to Confirm Sean Duffy for Transportation Secretary

    Capito, Whitehouse Announce EPW Subcommittee Assignments for the 119th Congress

    Senate President Randy Smith Names Leadership Team, Major Committee Chairmen for 87th Legislature

    Speaker Hanshaw Announces Plans for Upcoming 87th Legislature

    Miller’s Statement on Being Sworn in to her Fourth Term in Congress

    Trending Tags

    • Greenbrier County
    • Politics
    • Senate
    • Monroe County
    • White Sulphur Springs
    • Rainelle
    • Lewisburg
    • Alderson
    • City
    • County
    • State
  • Entertainment
  • PUBLIC NOTICES
    • PUBLIC LEGAL NOTICES
    • PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENTS
    • STATEWIDE LEGALS SEARCH
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Community
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
  • Government
    • All
    • City
    • County
    • State
    Governor Patrick Morrisey speaks during his press briefing on Wednesday, Jan. 29 after meeting with House and Senate leaders.

    Morrisey Sees Unique Opportunity to Grow West Virginia Economically

    Shelley Moore Capito

    Capito Votes to Confirm Sean Duffy for Transportation Secretary

    Capito, Whitehouse Announce EPW Subcommittee Assignments for the 119th Congress

    Senate President Randy Smith Names Leadership Team, Major Committee Chairmen for 87th Legislature

    Speaker Hanshaw Announces Plans for Upcoming 87th Legislature

    Miller’s Statement on Being Sworn in to her Fourth Term in Congress

    Trending Tags

    • Greenbrier County
    • Politics
    • Senate
    • Monroe County
    • White Sulphur Springs
    • Rainelle
    • Lewisburg
    • Alderson
    • City
    • County
    • State
  • Entertainment
  • PUBLIC NOTICES
    • PUBLIC LEGAL NOTICES
    • PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENTS
    • STATEWIDE LEGALS SEARCH
No Result
View All Result
West Virginia Daily News
No Result
View All Result
West Virginia Gov. Patrick Morrisey, seen giving his State of the State address on Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025, cut millions of the state budget with line item vetoes before signing the bill into law. (Perry Bennett | West Virginia Legislative Photography)

Governor Patrick Morrisey’s Statement on SCOTUS Decision in U.S. v. Skrmetti

June 18, 2025

Governor Patrick Morrisey Hosts Roundtable in Wheeling, Delivers Updates on State Flood Response

June 18, 2025
Allen Sexton

State Superintendent Announces Sexton as Boone County Superintendent

June 18, 2025

WVU Parkersburg Awarded Grant to Establish Agricultural Hub in Mid-Ohio Valley

June 18, 2025

Oliver Anthony, Treaty Oak Revival, and Flatland Cavalry to Headline Festival in Fairlea

June 18, 2025

Tags

Art BU Business Carnegie Hall Charleston college Community County Court Dear Abby Dr EPA Fair Family Featured Gov Grant Greenbrier Greenbrier County Greenbrier East health Home Justice Land Last Lewisburg Local Man New NY Obituary Plan Project Ronceverte School Son State The Greenbrier University US VA Virginia West Virginia White Sulphur Springs WV
QR Code

Money trees: WVU researchers looking at local benefits from climate fighting ability in Appalachian forests

by WV Daily News
in State News
August 9, 2024
Reading Time: 8 mins read
0
In Central Appalachia, programs that manage forested lands to enhance the carbon-storing capabilities of trees and soil are paying dividends for large corporate landowners but leaving small landholders out, according to WVU research. Biologist Steven Kannenberg is working to ensure local communities benefit from the carbon credits their forests generate. (WVU Photo/Alyssa Reeves)

In Central Appalachia, programs that manage forested lands to enhance the carbon-storing capabilities of trees and soil are paying dividends for large corporate landowners but leaving small landholders out, according to WVU research. Biologist Steven Kannenberg is working to ensure local communities benefit from the carbon credits their forests generate. (WVU Photo/Alyssa Reeves)

10
SHARES
69
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (WVDN) — Researchers at West Virginia University are working to ensure small landowners and local communities, instead of large corporations, profit from the ability of Central Appalachian forests to remove greenhouse gas carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

So-called “forest-based climate solution programs” manage forest ecosystems in a way that enhances carbon storage by planting trees, for example, or by restricting logging. To ensure these programs benefit both forests and local communities, a WVU team will spend the next four years investigating how different management practices affect Appalachian forest life — from the trees and other flora that grow there to the loggers, farmers, trail riders and ginseng gatherers who are also part of those ecosystems. 

The project is supported by $1.7 million from the National Science Foundation.

“To curb climate change, we have to reduce fossil fuel emissions. But we can also take advantage of our forests’ ability to remove the carbon dioxide in our atmosphere and store it long term in wood and soils,” said Steven Kannenberg, assistant professor of biology at the WVU Eberly College of Arts and Sciences. “In particular, the forests of the eastern U.S. are an incredibly large carbon sink. The amount of carbon dioxide they capture is equivalent to 40-60% of the region’s fossil fuel emissions.”

There’s money to be made from that carbon capture. In 2023, the Biden Administration poured $150 million into forest-based climate solution programs targeting small-acreage landowners. The financial markets trade billions of dollars in carbon offset credits every year.

However, although about 70% of eastern U.S. forests are under small individual or family ownership, little revenue has made its way to local communities. Instead, Kannenberg said forest-based climate projects “are overwhelmingly conducted on corporate landholdings owned by entities outside the region.”

He said he believes identifying incentives for local landowners to allow carbon management programs on their properties is essential to combatting climate change. Landowners who agree to host these programs contract with companies to receive regular payments, based on acreage and the estimated amount of carbon stored, over a set number of years. 

The contracts have been a hard sell among small landholders in Appalachia, partly because revenues are only significant for large parcels. Owners typically must allow forestry management practices to happen on the land, and the long contracts restrict owners’ abilities to use the land for some commercial purposes or as collateral on loans.

Kannenberg also noted that while forestry management practices for improving soil health or biodiversity yield several potentially profitable “co-benefits” beyond just carbon capture, neither landowners nor forestry managers have the data they need to forecast those revenues.

The team will ask about problems like those in the surveys they’ll send to thousands of small landowners across the region, and in interviews with loggers, sawmill operators, tourism small business operators and other participants in the forest economy of a former Clearfork Valley mining community on the Tennessee-Kentucky border. 

The researchers will also fill serious knowledge gaps about how different management practices affect forests’ carbon sequestration capabilities, looking to sites where detailed logging records have been kept for a century: Fernow Experimental Forest, WVU Research Forest, Summit Bechtel Reserve and Monongahela National Forest. Each forest contains mature, undisturbed areas as well as areas that have been logged using a variety of common practices. 

By measuring factors like tree height, leaf area, the mass of root systems, the nutrients in the soil and annual growth using tree rings, the team will quantify the impacts of human intervention on the ecosystem over time.

Already, preliminary data has revealed how forestry management in those zones changed the species distribution and weakened resilience to climate change. At Fernow, red oaks became less prevalent after timber was harvested, replaced by trees without the oak’s ability to store large amounts of carbon and resist drought conditions.

“Eastern U.S. forests are critical to meeting greenhouse gas emission targets,” Kannenberg said. “Eastern forests are more resilient to climate change than the arid forests of the western U.S. because stressors such as rising temperatures, increasing drought, and enhanced pest and pathogen presence are projected to be less severe.

“That’s why projects exploring forest-based climate solutions are exploding in Central Appalachia. This region is going to be the model for how forested communities worldwide will transition out of economies based on fossil fuel extraction.”

Decarbonization seed funding secured by the WVU Research Office permitted the acquisition of some initial data.

The WVU research team also includes Kathryn Gazal, associate professor of forest resources management in the WVU Davis College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, as well as Brenden McNeil, professor of geography, and Edward Brzostek, associate professor and associate chair for graduate studies, both from the Eberly College. 

This page is available to subscribers. Click here to sign in or get access.

WV Daily News

West Virginia Daily News has been serving Greenbrier and Monroe Counties since 1852.

Tags: AppalachiaAppalachianIanLocalResearchWVwvu

Related

State News

WVU Parkersburg Awarded Grant to Establish Agricultural Hub in Mid-Ohio Valley

June 18, 2025
State News

W.Va. Guard deploys troops in aftermath of deadly flooding

June 18, 2025
State News

WVDNR announces West Virginia Gold Rush giveaway winners

June 18, 2025
Mitch Carmichael, secretary of the Department of Economic Development
State News

Fomer WV Secretary of Economic Development Mitch Carmichael to Lead New Initiative

June 11, 2025
Load More
[adrotate group="11"]
Next Post

BREAKING: Covington Honda Nissan acquired by Greenbrier Automotive Group

West Virginia Daily News

The West Virginia Daily News has been serving the Greenbrier Valley and southeastern West Virginia since 1852.

Learn more

Information

  • Home
  • Subscribe to the WV Daily News
  • Grants & Assistance
  • Submit News and Events
  • Privacy Policy
  • Ethics, Standards & Corrections
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2022 The West Virginia Daily News, powered by ECENT CORPORATION. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Menu Item
  • _____________
  • Home
  • Editions
  • News
    • Local News
    • National News
    • State News
    • Crime
    • Business and Tech
  • Community
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
    • Local Sports
    • High School Sports
    • College Sports
  • Government
    • City
    • County
    • State
  • Entertainment
  • Public Notices

Copyright © 2022 The West Virginia Daily News, powered by ECENT CORPORATION. All Rights Reserved.