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US Forest Service
1400 Independence Ave., SW
Washington, D.C.
20250-0003

(800) 832-1355

 
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Climate Change

“I believe history will judge the leaders of our age by how well we respond to climate change. It is time...(for) a coordinated, agency-wide response to climate change.”

Learn more about the Forest Service's Strategic Framework for Responding to Climate Change.

The Forest Service has several inter-related programs to help forests, grasslands and humans mitigate and adapt to global climate change.













US Climate Change Science Program's newly released synthesis assessment products (SAPs) - SAP 4.4 is the newest one and is about adpation options for ecosystems and resources.
climatescience.gov


The IPCC was established to provide the decision-makers and others interested in climate change with an objective source of information about climate change.
www.ipcc.ch











Research & Development

Forest Service scientists provide data, information and tools to help managers and policymakers address the effects of climate change on forests and grasslands. Learn more »

See what the Forest Service’s Research & Development program is doing about climate change in your region of the country! Just click on the map!

A map of Forest Service research and development areas Pacific Northwest Rocky Mountain Pacific Southwest Southern Northern Pacific Northwest Pacific Southwest Pacific Southwest International Institute of Tropical Forestry Forest Products Laboratory International Institute of Tropical Forestry Northern Pacific Northwest Pacific Southwest Rocky Mountain Southern

 

Land Management & Project Planning

The guidance documents Climate Change Considerations in Project Level NEPA Analysisand Climate Change Considerations in Land Management Plan Revisions, provide the Agency with the support needed to appropriately incorporate climate change into land management planning and project- level NEPA documentation. The guidance documents frame climate change with two fundamental challenges: how our management may influence climate change mainly through incremental changes to global pools of greenhouse gases and how climate change may affect our forests and grasslands. These guidance documents will be dynamic and adaptive as we discover more about climate change science, its application to adaptation and mitigation strategies, and appropriate analysis at the unit and project scales. Learn more »

 

Information and Tools for Wildland Managers in the West

A Climate Change Resource Center has been developed as a reference for US Forest Service resource managers and decision makers who need
information and tools to address climate change in planning and project implementation on western national forests. Learn more »

 

Sustainable Operations

The concept of sustainability is embedded in the Forest Service mission to “sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of the nation’s forests and grasslands to meet the needs of present and future generations.” Learn more »

 

Sustainable Resource Management

The Forest Service mission is to “Sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of the nation's forests and grasslands to meet the needs of present and future generations." Learn more »

 

Ecological Restoration

The Forest Service is helping re-establish and maintain ecological processes and function in the national forests and grasslands to increase their resilience and capacity to provide goods and services such as clean water, clean air and wildlife habitat. Learn more »

 

Biomass Utilization

Woody biomass utilization is one of several forest management tools to help restore and maintain healthy ecosystem functions. Learn more »

 

Ecosystem Services: Carbon

Ecosystem services are the essential benefits that people obtain from healthy forests and grasslands. These include basic services like the delivery of food, fresh water, wood and fiber, and medicine, and other services that are less tangible but equally critical to human health and well-being, such as climate regulation, erosion control, soil formation, recreational opportunities, and scenic landscapes. Ecosystem change over the past century has had a measurable impact on our natural systems and their ability to supply ecosystem services. Learn more »

 

International Programs

International Programs of the US Forest Service promotes sustainable forest management and biodiversity conservation internationally. By linking the skills of the field-based staff of the US Forest Service with partners overseas, the Agency can address the most critical forestry issues and concerns. Learn more »



US Forest Service
Last modified April 09, 2009
http://www.fs.fed.us

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