Tips for forest owners for maintaining carbon sinks

To combat climate change, we must keep our greenhouse gas emissions so small that carbon sinks can fully compensate for them. We can maintain forests’ carbon sinks by using wood sustainably, promoting forest growth and avoiding forest damage.

 According to Natural Resources Institute Finland, active forest management has increased both the growth and volume of trees in Finland. Forests' carbon storage has increased, as forests now have more wood than a hundred years ago, when the first national forest inventory was carried out.

As a forest owner, you maintain the carbon sinks of forests by managing your forest well. The measures described on this page will help you to continue to look after your forest’s carbon sink.

Tips for forest owners on maintaining carbon sinks

  • Regenerate rapidly and use improved seeds and seedlings

    Regenerate rapidly and use improved seeds and seedlings

  • Carry out or commission young stand management in time

    Carry out or commission young stand management in time

  • Leave at least ten per cent of broadleaved trees on the stand

    Leave at least ten per cent of broadleaved trees on the stand

  • Carry out thinning in time and consider crown thinning

    Carry out thinning in time and consider crown thinning

  • Fertilise

    Fertilise

  • Focus on peatlands

    Focus on peatlands

Ensure forest biodiversity at all stages of forest management

Dead and decaying wood is needed in addition to carbon sinks. Decaying trees release carbon slowly as they decompose, but they play a very important role in forest biodiversity. Existing dead and decaying trees should therefore be left in place during forestry work, and the amount of decaying wood can be increased by making high biodiversity stumps, for example.

Around a fifth of all species living in Finnish forests depend on decaying wood. This shows how immensely important decaying wood is to the safeguarding of forest biodiversity. In addition to ensuring an adequate amount of decaying wood in the forest, it is important to ensure that it comes in different sizes and at different stages of decay. Decaying wood should be found both lying on the ground and as standing stumps, because different species need different types of it.