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Tackling the Overestimation of Forest Carbon with Deep Learning and Aerial Imagery

Authors :
Reiersen, Gyri
Dao, David
Lütjens, Björn
Klemmer, Konstantin
Zhu, Xiaoxiang
Zhang, Ce
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Forest carbon offsets are increasingly popular and can play a significant role in financing climate mitigation, forest conservation, and reforestation. Measuring how much carbon is stored in forests is, however, still largely done via expensive, time-consuming, and sometimes unaccountable field measurements. To overcome these limitations, many verification bodies are leveraging machine learning (ML) algorithms to estimate forest carbon from satellite or aerial imagery. Aerial imagery allows for tree species or family classification, which improves the satellite imagery-based forest type classification. However, aerial imagery is significantly more expensive to collect and it is unclear by how much the higher resolution improves the forest carbon estimation. This proposal paper describes the first systematic comparison of forest carbon estimation from aerial imagery, satellite imagery, and ground-truth field measurements via deep learning-based algorithms for a tropical reforestation project. Our initial results show that forest carbon estimates from satellite imagery can overestimate above-ground biomass by up to 10-times for tropical reforestation projects. The significant difference between aerial and satellite-derived forest carbon measurements shows the potential for aerial imagery-based ML algorithms and raises the importance to extend this study to a global benchmark between options for carbon measurements.<br />Comment: Spotlight talk at the Tackling Climate Change with Machine Learning workshop at the ICML 2021 https://www.climatechange.ai/papers/icml2021/79

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2107.11320
Document Type :
Working Paper