1. Introduction
The climate change regulation service provided by the ecosystem through the carbon storage capacity is one of the most important ecosystem services [
1]. In particular, the forest ecosystem plays a critical role as a carbon pool, accounting for approximately 40% of the carbon stored in land biomass [
2,
3]. However, all kinds of man-made global environmental change are giving serious negative impacts on the carbon storage capacity. Especially, the land use and land cover (LULC) changes, such as urbanization and deforestation, can be a spatial factor which gives direct impacts on the carbon storage capacity of the ecosystem [
1]. Urbanization acts as a pressure to the ecosystem that plays a significant role in storing the carbon [
1,
4] and leads to a decrease of the carbon storage capacity [
4,
5]. Diminution of natural areas such as forest, agricultural land and wetland also leads to a decrease of the carbon storage capacity. In addition, the LULC changes in forest areas give impacts to the carbon storage and also carbon fluxes from local to global scale [
6,
7].
On the other hand, the market price of carbon can be an economic factor that indirectly affects the carbon storage of the ecosystem. The policy decisions whether to preserve the forests or to develop the lands for alternate use are influenced by the market value of the carbon. But, the current market prices of carbon cannot sufficiently reflect the environmental value as the natural capital [
8]. Generally, carbon is stored in natural capital such as forests, farmland, wetland, etc., which have a role as public goods or environmental goods. Once public goods or environmental properties are destroyed, the effects are prolonged and recovery takes a long time. Therefore, the price of carbon, including the future cost of environmental destruction and recovery, must be taken into account in the decision-making process. But, usually, the market price is determined by reflecting the current value thought by the participants in the market using known information. For carbon, globally the carbon price mechanism has a short history and is still a growing market. This means that participants in the carbon market can underestimate carbon prices due to a lack of information. Therefore, the carbon sequestration service value can be underestimated if the current carbon market price is applied.
In an effort to get a reasonable price of carbon, the social costs which take the environmental and social values of the carbon into account can be utilized in the policy making process [
9]. That is, the price of carbon should reflect, as Michaelowa et al. [
9] argues, environmental and social costs so that the decision-making of development can be made based on the proper cost–benefit analysis. In addition, the appropriate price of carbon could be introduced by setting a clear policy objective and the scope of the carbon prices, and also by increasing the accuracy of the emission data collection and verification. For example, accurate measurement, reporting and verification should be in place for a specific operation or abatement technology of carbon emission so that the country operating the carbon pricing mechanism sets the accurate emission cap for the nation, sector, and company, which in turn affect carbon prices.
Thus, the scale and type of LULC change and carbon prices are the factors that either directly or indirectly affecting the carbon sequestration service of the ecosystem. The countries with high development pressure are experiencing many LULC changes, and they also tend to make economic growth-oriented policy decisions. Consequently, the carbon storage capacity provided by the ecosystem may have decreased greatly and the economic value of the carbon sequestration service may also have reduced. The Republic of Korea (hereinafter referred to as Korea) is a classic example. Korea is the country that has successfully achieved afforestation after the Second World War and the Korean War. However, there have been constant LULC changes, such as conversion of the forests, followed by the new town development and implementation of the local government development projects after the 1990′s, and frequent economic growth-oriented policy decisions.
There is a need to analyze how carbon storage capacity changes according to the LULC change at the municipal/county level which is the basic units of the policy decision-making bodies, in countries such as Korea where development projects take place frequently. Moreover, it is also important to evaluate how the economic value of the carbon sequestration service alters when the market price of the carbon is applied. In the precedent research, many studies analyzed the changes of the carbon stocks according to the LULC change. Pan et al. [
10] estimated that the carbon stocks of 1.3 ± 0.7 P g C year
−1 were lost due to the LULC change in the tropical areas from 1990 to 2007 globally. Tomasso and Leighton [
11], Han et al. [
12], and Zhang et al. [
13] used the LULC maps to analyze changes in the carbon stocks according to the land use changes. For the economic value of the carbon, Patton et al. [
14] estimated the monetary value of the wetland ecosystems registered as the US National Wildlife Refuge. Hansen [
15] estimated the economic value of the agricultural land and forest wetland restoration through social costs of the carbon. On the other hand, few studies have been carried to simultaneously consider both changes in the carbon stocks and its economic value according to the LULC changes. Roh et al. [
16] estimated the changes of the carbon stocks and its monetary value but only to cover the local area on the Jeju Special Self-Governing Province in Korea.
In this paper, we have investigated the changes of the carbon stocks according to the LULC change between 1989 and 2009 when the regional development projects were actively implemented in Korea. Next, we have analyzed how the economic value of the carbon sequestration services varied regionally when the market price of the carbon was applied. Through this, this study aims to clarify the management direction of the carbon storage capacity and carbon sequestration services of the national and local governments considering the changes of the carbon storage capacity in countries with high development pressure like Korea. We would also like to propose a policy direction, to take the social cost of the carbon into consideration in the process of establishing environmental policy decisions.
4. Discussion
4.1. Changes in the Carbon Stocks According to the LULC Changes: Similarities and Differences between the Country and Regions (Cities/Counties)
Even in countries experiencing rapid economic growth, development projects tend to be concentrated in specific regions. In other words, even if the LULC changes occur both in the national and regional level, there is a regional difference in development pressure. This trend was also confirmed in Korea. From 1989 to 2009, the LULC changes in Korea have been accelerated due to the implementation of the regional development projects and urban sprawl. At the national level, many forest and agricultural lands have been changed. After having analyzed the LULC map [
19,
20], it was found that between 1989 and 2009, the agricultural land increased by 0.9% (953.2 km
2) and the forest land decreased by 4.9% (4942.2 km
2). At the local level, however, The Jeju Special Self-Governing Province and Hwaseong City in the Gyeonggi-do Province, where many regional development projects were actively implemented, showed more LULC changes during the same period (1989–2009). In the Jeju Special Self-Governing Province, the urban and agricultural lands increased by 42.5% and 116.1% while the forest land decreased by 29.8% [
44]. This means that changes in carbon stocks due to LULC changes may differ across national and regional levels. In addition, the amount of the LULC change and the type of the change vary according to the area, and the carbon stock change due to the LULC change varies greatly by region.
In Korea, where development pressure was high for the 20 years between 1989 and 2009, there have been similarities and differences in the changes of the carbon stocks according to spatial scales between countries and regions. As a common denominator, it was found that there were considerable changes in the carbon stocks when the LULC change was greater, at both the national and regional (cities/counties) level. At the national level, forest lands and agricultural lands were largely transformed into other LULC types and it resulted in a large loss of the carbon stocks (
Table 3). At the regional level, cities and counties also experienced a larger loss of the carbon stocks due to the LULC changes in areas where the carbon stocks were high in 1989 (
Figure 7). There were also differences between countries and regions. At the national level, LULC changes from forest land to agricultural land, urban land, and grasslands have had a significant impact on carbon stock changes. However, in the regions, the amount of the carbon stock changes (amounts) and change factors (types of LULC change) varied by region (
Table 4,
Figure 6). In terms of quantity, it can be observed that the carbon stocks have decreased much in the places where development projects are actively promoted (Seogwipo City, Jeju City, Hwaseong City, Ulsan City, Cheongju City, Yongin City etc.). For example, in Seogwipo, ranches, farms and recreational areas increased during this period. In Jeju, farms, ranches and golf courses increased. In Hwaseong, large-scale development projects constructing the residential, industrial and commercial areas were promoted due to the new town development policy of national government. However, in the areas where the carbon stocks were large but the development projects were less promoted (Inje County, Hongcheon County, Jungsun County, Andong City, Bonghwa County, etc.), the carbon stock changes were relatively small. At regional level, the types of the LULC change which are the cause of the carbon stock changes also varied from ‘forest land → agricultural land’, ‘forest land → urban land’, ‘agricultural land → urban land’, and ‘forest land → grassland’.
4.2. Reduction of the Carbon Sequestration Services Due to the LULC Change by Region
Korea’s carbon market is still in its infancy, and its market price is low, such as the prices in the carbon pricing mechanism of many other countries. Therefore, the Korean ETS market price applied in this study has limits to understanding how much the loss of carbon sequestration service is due to LULC change in Korea. Despite this limitation, the economic value of carbon sequestration services can be estimated relatively by region according to the LULC change. This information provides the data necessary for the policy-making process that leads to LULC change. In this study, the analysis shows that carbon sequestration services have declined over the past 20 years in all 16 regional provinces. In particular, as shown in
Table 6, Gyeonggi-do and Gyeongsangbuk-do had many losses of carbon sequestration service. Using this information, many regional governments can make the policy to prevent the loss of carbon sequestration services and to maintain the sustainable carbon sequestration services.
As carbon prices rise globally, the decline in carbon sequestration services due to LULC changes will increase further in the future. Many countries are raising the carbon prices through implementation of policies such as the carbon price floor. In addition, the carbon prices are expected to climb steadily through reduction or abolishment of fossil fuel subsidies, and by corporate audits of climate-related fiscal crises driven by financial institutions. National and regional governments, therefore, are required to take policy countermeasures considering the LULC changes and the loss of the value in the carbon sequestration services due to the raise of the carbon prices.
In addition, given that the environmental and social value of the carbon is being reflected in the market prices, the loss of carbon sequestration services induced by LULC changes might increase in the future. In other words, the severity of the LULC change from forest land to agricultural land and urban areas will become higher. With the enforcement of policies which leads to the LULC changes, the amount that the country and local communities will have to pay as the opportunity costs for the carbon sequestration services may increase exponentially in the future.
4.3. Future Policy Directions to Sustain the Carbon Sequestration Services
The overall decline in the carbon stocks and the difference in the regional declines will continue without policy shifts. In Korea, analysis of the LULC map in 2014 [
45] for the Gyeonggi-do Province, where the LULC changes were prominent during the study period (1989–2009), grassland increased by 210.5% in 2009–2014, and barren land also increased by 44.1%. On the other hand, agricultural land decreased by 20% and also forest land decreased by 3.5% during the same period. In the Jeju Special Self-Governing Province, agricultural land decreased by 12.9% in the same period, while urban area increased by 33.9%. In countries and regions, therefore, where development projects are expanded, such as Korea, the LULC changes and carbon value should be taken into consideration for the sustainable maintenance of the future carbon sequestration services.
The United Nations predicts that 90% of the urban growth will occur in low-income countries in Asia and Africa by 2050 [
46]. These urbanization and development projects will frequently occur in natural areas, such as mangroves, rain forests, farmland which operated with traditional knowledges, and tropical and temperate wetlands. But once destroyed, the ecosystem will take a long time to return to its previous state and to restore its carbon storage capacity and value. Forests take a long time, usually 20 to 200 years, to recover naturally after a disturbance [
47]. Even after restoration, its ecological value is never the same [
47,
48,
49]. Therefore, in developing countries or regions where development projects occur locally, it is necessary to consider the value of carbon sequestration services as an important factor when making policy decisions that bring LULC changes in forest land, agricultural lands, wetlands, and other natural ecosystems.
The sustainable carbon storage capacity and carbon sequestration service management policies, which take into account the LULC changes and carbon price, can be implemented both jointly and separately by the national and local governments. The joint management policy can be suggested as follows. First, there is a need for a continuous monitoring on the LULC changes for the ecosystem types with high carbon stocks. Second, if the policy which induces the LULC changes would not be avoidable, it is necessary to shift to the LULC type that may have less impact on the carbon stocks. For instance, when implementing national policies or regional development projects, it is necessary to consider the transition types from forest land into agricultural lands, grassland and wetland rather than to the urban land. Third, both state and local governments should consider the carbon storage capacity and the opportunity costs that the project sites have as a carbon pool when establishing development policies for forest lands and agricultural lands.
The followings are the carbon storage capacity and carbon sequestration service management policies that need to be differentiated according to the characteristics of the country and region. Nationally, it is important to implement policies that focus on deforestation, urban expansion and agricultural land reclamation projects. In addition, when there is a LULC change, the state should recognize the opportunity costs that the carbon pools such as forests and agricultural land will lose as social costs and internalize them into the market prices. Locally, it is necessary to enforce policies that are appropriate to the characteristics of each region, taking the size and pattern of the carbon stock changes into account. For example, in this study, the Jeju Special Self-governing Province, in which the carbon stocks are greatly reduced due to the decrease in forests, needs a policy that allows them to designate the remaining forests as protected areas. In addition, since the rank one of the LULC change is from forests to agricultural lands, a policy to reduce agricultural land expansion is required. On the other hand, the Jeju City needs measures to reduce the LULC changes from forests to grassland, and Seogwipo City needs measures to reduce LULC changes from forests to urban areas.
5. Conclusions
This study analyzed the changes in the carbon stocks and the economic values caused by the LULC changes between 1989 and 2009, when the development pressure was accelerated in the urban surrounding areas and local regions in Korea. This study is valuable to show the difference in carbon storage loss caused by LULC changes and its economic value loss in countries and regions where development projects occur frequently. In particular, it helps to establish regionally-differentiated policies according to the size and type of LULC changes in countries and regions that promote carbon sequestration service management policies. But this study has some limitations. Since there was no LULC map established nationwide since the 2010s, it did not reflect recent LULC changes. The carbon price is based on the Korean ETS price, but not a stable carbon price.
We, therefore, suggest follows as the future studies: Research is needed to propose future policy directions for the management of carbon storage services in local municipalities using the latest LULC change data and future LULC change scenarios. This can reflect various socioeconomic conditions and regional policy changes, which will lead to more realistic implications for policy makers. It is also necessary to conduct research on the economic value of carbon storage services that apply the social cost of carbon so that the social and environmental values of carbon can be reflected in policy decisions.