Forest Sector Modelling – Risks and Resilience

Project lead(s)  Anne Murthy; Dr Vadim Saraev | Forest Research

Lead Organisation(s)  Forest Research

Project status   Active
Project funding 25-26  £206,960
Research outcome(s)  Reducing the risk; Adaptation; Recovery
Context
To help address risks to forest productivity, the UK Climate Change Committee’s Climate Change Risk Assessment (CCRA3) Evidence Report 2021 recommends ‘combined use of climate projections with socioeconomic scenarios to place UK domestic production within an international context’. Forest Research’s Forest Mensuration, Growth, and Yield Science Group has already created advanced tools that model how forests grow and change over time and are capable of projecting timber supply and forecast carbon stock changes. 

However, these models do not yet factor in how economics and adaptation policies influence forest management. This project aims to fill that gap using Forest Sector Models (tools that combine forest science with economics), to show how forests, markets, and management choices affect each other.  

Research aims and objectives
Aim:

Build the foundation for a new proof of concept Forest Sector Model to help the UK better manage and protect its forests. 

Objectives:
  • Understand how climate change, pests, and diseases could affect tree growth, forest health, timber markets, and the income and risks faced by forest landowners.
  • Explore how changes in profits and risks might influence the types of trees landowners choose to plant, and how this could shape the future of UK forests and timber supply. 
  • Assess how different policies could help to reduce risks, support forest recovery, and increase resilience to future challenges.
  • Collaborate with Forest Sector Model experts in France and Scandinavia, where these types of models are already used effectively.
  • Use the proof of concept Forest Sector Model to combine biological and economic information to predict how biotic (living organisms), and abiotic (physical and environmental factors) risks could affect the health and productivity of UK forests.
  • Explore different policy options to reduce these risks and help forests adapt over time.  

Expected outcomes
  • In-depth understanding of French and Scandinavian Forest Sector Model’s and how a similar approach may be applied to build a UK Forest Sector Model.

  • Create a proof-of-concept UK Forest Sector Model that shows how forests grow and change, how markets are affected, and how management decisions play a role.

  • Share the technical findings of the project through at least one published journal article.

Modula Structure of the French Forest Sector Model (similar approach likely to be followed in developing a prototype UK Forest Sector Model). Credit: French Forest Sector Model
Title image: Crown Copyright. Forestry Commission – John McFarlane
Body image: Crown Copyright. Forest Research – John Brushett
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