Examples include environmental plantings established for conservation purposes, agroforestry plantings, shelter/shade belts, forestry plantations, vineyards, orchards and other perennial food crops. Secondary (regrowth) forests are not included as plantations even if regrowth has been artificially managed or supplemented (see Native forests and woodlands). 

This category corresponds to IUCN-GET Ecosystem Functional Group T7.3 (Plantations).
Stocks (assets)
Flows (benefits)

Area of ecosystem asset

Units

ha

Example approach

Estimate % of total land area covered by ecosystem type, multiplied by total land area.

Example method guidance / data source

Internal records

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

ha

Example approach

Estimate extent using national/state/territory map data

Example method guidance / data source

National/state/territory maps, e.g. forest and woody vegetation cover can be obtained from Emissions Reduction Fund Environmental Data

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

ha

Example approach

Measure extent using remote sensing in combination with ground-truthing for detailed site mapping

Example method guidance / data source

Producer or third party GIS

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Area of plantation type by age class

Type

Variable

SEEA ECT Class

Structural state

Units

ha

Example approach

Estimate % of total asset area covered by plantation type of each age class, multiplied by total asset area

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Internal records

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Type

Variable

SEEA ECT Class

Structural state

Units

ha

Example approach

Estimate asset area in each condition state using national/state/territory map data and/or remote sensing inputs

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Type

Variable

SEEA ECT Class

Structural state

Units

ha

Example approach

Measure asset area in each condition state using site-specific remote and/or in-field sensing inputs

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Type

Variable

SEEA ECT Class

Various

Units

Various

Example approach

Estimate condition using informal sampling or visual assessment

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Internal records

Notes

Example variables relatively easily estimated include dominant tree height (a major influence on shelter) and % crown cover (a major influence on shade).

Type

Variable

SEEA ECT Class

Various

Units

Various

Example approach

Estimate condition using national/state/territory map data plus informal sampling or visual assessment

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Notes

More advanced variables include those listed in tier 1, plus configuration (e.g. length, gaps, distance to sheltered area and orientation to prevailing wind). May involve basic modelling.

Type

Variable

SEEA ECT Class

Various

Units

Various

Example approach

Measure condition using site-specific remote and/or in-field sensing inputs

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Notes

More advanced variables include all of those listed in tier 1 and tier 2, plus porosity in context of weather factors. May involve advanced modelling.

Harvested timber or firewood

Units

t or m3

SEEA ES sub-type

Wood provisioning services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final

Example approach

Estimate number of truckloads removed, multiplied by estimated volume or weight per load, adjusted to include estimated % waste/residues/losses

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Internal records

Notes

Following SEEA-EA (s. 6.4, pp. 134-137), it is recommended that the physical flow of biomass provisioning services is equal to the harvest in gross terms, i.e. before harvest losses, felling residues etc. are deducted.

Units

t or m3

SEEA ES sub-type

Wood provisioning services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final

Example approach

Count number of truckloads removed, multiplied by measured volume or weight per load, adjusted to include estimated % waste/residues/losses

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Third-party records of timber harvested or delivered

Notes

Following SEEA-EA (s. 6.4, pp. 134-137), it is recommended that the physical flow of biomass provisioning services is equal to the harvest in gross terms, i.e. before harvest losses, felling residues etc. are deducted.

Units

t or m3

SEEA ES sub-type

Wood provisioning services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final

Example approach

Count number of truckloads removed, multiplied by measured volume or weight per load, plus measured waste/residues/losses

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

On-site data from weighbridges, harvesting equipment etc

Notes

Following SEEA-EA (s. 6.4, pp. 134-137), it is recommended that the physical flow of biomass provisioning services is equal to the harvest in gross terms, i.e. before harvest losses, felling residues etc. are deducted.

Units

kg

SEEA ES sub-type

Wild animals, plants and other biomass provisioning services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final

Example approach

Estimate number of productive units (e.g. beehives), multiplied by estimated product per unit

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Internal records

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

kg

SEEA ES sub-type

Wild animals, plants and other biomass provisioning services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final

Example approach

Count number of productive units, multiplied by measured product per unit

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Third-party records of timber harvested or delivered

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

kg

SEEA ES sub-type

Wild animals, plants and other biomass provisioning services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final

Example approach

Count number of productive units, multiplied by measured product per unit

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

On-site records of products harvested or delivered; video surveillance data

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

tC or tCO2

SEEA ES sub-type

Global climate regulation services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final

Example approach

Estimate using internal records and tools/calculators

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

A variety of greenhouse gas accounting tools, some of which include methods to estimate sequestered and/or retained carbon, can be found at the Primary Industries Climate Challenges Centre

Notes

The ecosystem service of carbon retention is measured by the opening stock of retained carbon (see SEEA-EA s. 6.4.3, pp. 139-140) as a proxy for the flow of this service. The scope conventionally covers above- and below-ground living and dead biomass and soil carbon up to 2m depth. Carbon retained in harvested wood products should not be considered an ecosystem service (SEEA-EA, s. 6.4.3, pp. 139-140), although it could be included in an entity’s carbon account or impact statement. An increase in retained carbon from year to year should equal the flow of the ecosystem service of carbon sequestration.

Units

tC or tCO2

SEEA ES sub-type

Global climate regulation services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final

Example approach

Estimate using using national/state/territory map data and/or remote sensing inputs

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

E.g. ForestNow

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

tC or tCO2

SEEA ES sub-type

Global climate regulation services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final

Example approach

Measure using site-specific remote and/or in-field sensing inputs and/or lab testing

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

E.g. FullCAM

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

tC or tCO2

SEEA ES sub-type

Global climate regulation services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final

Example approach

Estimate using internal records and tools/calculators

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

A variety of greenhouse gas accounting tools, some of which include methods to estimate sequestered and/or retained carbon, can be found at the Primary Industries Climate Challenges Centre

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

tC or tCO2

SEEA ES sub-type

Global climate regulation services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final

Example approach

Estimate using using national/state/territory map data and/or remote sensing inputs

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

E.g. ForestNow

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

tC or tCO2

SEEA ES sub-type

Global climate regulation services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final

Example approach

Measure using site-specific remote and/or in-field sensing inputs and/or lab testing

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

E.g. FullCAM

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

Various, e.g. additional yield (t/ha * ha affected) or contribution to liveweight (kg/standard animal unit * standard animal units affected)

SEEA ES sub-type

Local (micro and meso) climate regulation services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final or intermediate (see Notes)

Example approach

Estimate using informal sampling or visual assessment

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Internal records

Notes

Plantations can provide shade and/or shelter from wind, rain and/or snow as an intermediate service benefitting livestock, forage or crops for harvest as final services. The benefits should therefore appear in the financial accounts (in the form of increased productivity of livestock, pasture or crops) and/or elsewhere in the ecosystem accounts (under the ecosystem assets that benefit from the intermediate service). Nevertheless, it may be analytically useful to understand the contribution of shelter provision to these final services, as long as care is taken not to add the monetary value of intermediate and related final services together (see ecosystem services – monetary flows).

Units

Various, e.g. additional yield (t/ha * ha affected) or contribution to liveweight (kg/standard animal unit * standard animal units affected)

SEEA ES sub-type

Local (micro and meso) climate regulation services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final or intermediate (see Notes)

Example approach

Estimate using in-field, machine or animal sensing data and/or crop/pasture/livestock production models

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Notes

Plantations can provide shade and/or shelter from wind, rain and/or snow as an intermediate service benefitting livestock, forage or crops for harvest as final services. The benefits should therefore appear in the financial accounts (in the form of increased productivity of livestock, pasture or crops) and/or elsewhere in the ecosystem accounts (under the ecosystem assets that benefit from the intermediate service). Nevertheless, it may be analytically useful to understand the contribution of shelter provision to these final services, as long as care is taken not to add the monetary value of intermediate and related final services together (see ecosystem services – monetary flows).

Units

Various, e.g. additional yield (t/ha * ha affected) or contribution to liveweight (kg/standard animal unit * standard animal units affected)

SEEA ES sub-type

Local (micro and meso) climate regulation services

Intermediate or final (see SEEA-EA 2021, Table 6.3)

Final or intermediate (see Notes)

Example approach

Measure using in-field, machine and/or animal sensing data

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Notes

Plantations can provide shade and/or shelter from wind, rain and/or snow as an intermediate service benefitting livestock, forage or crops for harvest as final services. The benefits should therefore appear in the financial accounts (in the form of increased productivity of livestock, pasture or crops) and/or elsewhere in the ecosystem accounts (under the ecosystem assets that benefit from the intermediate service). Nevertheless, it may be analytically useful to understand the contribution of shelter provision to these final services, as long as care is taken not to add the monetary value of intermediate and related final services together (see ecosystem services – monetary flows).

Harvested timber or firewood – Stumpage price

Units

$/t or $/m3

Example approach

Multiply physical flow quantity by average stumpage price

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Timber harvester records

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

$/t or $/m3

Example approach

Multiply physical flow quantity by average stumpage price for different types of timber product

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Timber harvester records

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

$/t or $/m3

Example approach

Multiply physical flow quantity by stumpage price for specific areas harvested

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Timber harvester records

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

$/kg

Example approach

Multiply physical flow quantity by (average market price less average production costs) for different types of product

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Non-timber forest product harvester records

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

$/kg

Example approach

Multiply physical flow quantity by (average market price less average production costs) for different types of product

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Non-timber forest product harvester records

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

$/kg

Example approach

Multiply physical flow quantity by (market price less production costs) for specific areas harvested

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Non-timber forest product harvester records

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

N/A

Example approach

N/A

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

N/A

Notes

There is no observable market for the ecosystem service of retaining existing carbon stocks, and the value of the service of retaining any newly sequestered carbon would be included in the valuation applied to the ecosystem service of carbon sequestration (see below), therefore it is not recommended that any monetary value is applied to retained carbon.

Units

N/A

Example approach

N/A

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

N/A

Notes

There is no observable market for the ecosystem service of retaining existing carbon stocks, and the value of the service of retaining any newly sequestered carbon would be included in the valuation applied to the ecosystem service of carbon sequestration (see below), therefore it is not recommended that any monetary value is applied to retained carbon.

Units

N/A

Example approach

N/A

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

N/A

Notes

There is no observable market for the ecosystem service of retaining existing carbon stocks, and the value of the service of retaining any newly sequestered carbon would be included in the valuation applied to the ecosystem service of carbon sequestration (see below), therefore it is not recommended that any monetary value is applied to retained carbon.

Units

$/tC or $/tCO2

Example approach

Multiply physical flow quantity by (average market price less average production costs)

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Options for determining an appropriate price include average prices from ERF auctions, estimates of the marginal cost of carbon sequestration or emissions abatement for, or a social cost of carbon based on exchange values (all for the relevant period).

Notes

Technically, the full price paid in ERF auctions per tonne of CO2e sequestered is for the combined services of carbon sequestration and retention for 100 years. However, it can be assumed that the price component for annual retention is small, therefore the ERF price approximates the current value of carbon sequestration services.

Units

$/tC or $/tCO2

Example approach

Multiply physical flow quantity by (average market price less average production costs)

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Options for determining an appropriate price include average prices from ERF auctions, estimates of the marginal cost of carbon sequestration or emissions abatement for, or a social cost of carbon based on exchange values (all for the relevant period).

Notes

Technically, the full price paid in ERF auctions per tonne of CO2e sequestered is for the combined services of carbon sequestration and retention for 100 years. However, it can be assumed that the price component for annual retention is small, therefore the ERF price approximates the current value of carbon sequestration services.

Units

$/tC or $/tCO2

Example approach

Multiply physical flow quantity by (market price less production costs) for specific areas

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Options for determining an appropriate price include average prices from ERF auctions, estimates of the marginal cost of carbon sequestration or emissions abatement for, or a social cost of carbon based on exchange values (all for the relevant period).

Notes

Technically, the full price paid in ERF auctions per tonne of CO2e sequestered is for the combined services of carbon sequestration and retention for 100 years. However, it can be assumed that the price component for annual retention is small, therefore the ERF price approximates the current value of carbon sequestration services.

Units

$/t or $/kg

Example approach

Multiply physical flow quantity by (average market price less average production costs)

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Internal records

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

$/t or $/m3

Example approach

Multiply physical flow quantity by (average market price less average production costs)

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Internal records

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Units

$/t or $/kg

Example approach

Multiply physical flow quantity by (market price less production costs) for specific areas harvested

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Internal records

Notes

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Last updated: 25th July 2023