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期刊名称:CARBON MANAGEMENT

ISSN:1758-3004
出版频率:Bi-monthly
出版社:TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON, England, OXON, OX14 4RN
  出版社网址:http://www.future-science.com/
期刊网址:http://www.future-science.com/loi/cmt
影响因子: 3.182 (2020年) 1.463(2018年) 1.109(2017年) 1.661(2016年) 2.092(2015年) 1.589(2014年) 1.722(2013年) 2.068 (2012年)
主题范畴:ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

Journal cover

 

 

 

 

 

The significance of carbon management in today's world cannot be overestimated; carbon is ubiquitous and its presence affects every aspect of life and all lifestyles. Recognition of the problems caused by rising levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide has led to international demand for strategies to manage and reduce emissions and their associated climatic effects.

Carbon Management provides an international peer-reviewed forum for current insights from the diverse array of disciplines working to enhance our understanding of carbon interactions - from biology, ecology, chemistry and engineering to law, policy, economics and sociology.

Carbon Management examines the mechanisms by which we can both manage current GHG levels and reduce future emissions effectively, to mitigate climate change. The journal covers opportunities for carbon management throughout the whole carbon cycle, including technological and engineering innovations for carbon sequestration, as well as the role of natural processes. Plans aimed at managing and reducing emitted carbon, such as carbon accounting initiatives, also feature.

The core scientific research and review content of each issue is augmented by news, editorials, interviews and policy updates presenting enlightened opinion and commentary on pressing and topical issues. The journal's diverse content reflects the range of expertise and innovative enquiry essential to remain at the forefront of this rapidly emerging field.

Decisions made in the near future will have profound consequences on the impact of carbon management for decades to come. Carbon Management delivers a synthesis of the latest findings relevant to those working in the fields of research, education, management and environmental policy. It provides detailed information in an accessible format, serving as an essential reference to inform future decisions.

Key themes include:

  • Carbon accounting initiatives, including carbon footprinting and emissions trading
  • Validation of emissions data and measurement techniques
  • Modeling of carbon emission and management scenarios for multiple climate stabilization targets.
  • Policy developments to regulate and Incentivize reductions in carbon emissions
  • Market-based mechanisms of emission reductions
  • Management processes at local, regional and national levels
  • The impacts of anthropogenic activities on carbon emissions, including energy and waste management; transport and trade; business, industry and domestic; buildings, construction methods and urbanisation; farming, agriculture and food production; deforestation and forestry practices

Indexing

Biofuel

CAB Abstracts

Chemical Abstracts

Compendex

Current Contents®/Social and Behavioral Sciences

EnCompassLIT

Journal Citation Reports/ Social Sciences Edition

Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition

Science Citation Index Expanded (SciSearch®)

Scopus

Social Sciences Citation Index®


Instructions to Authors
BFS-CMT-author-guidelines.pdf

Editorial Board

Senior Editors



Dhakal S, Asian Institute of Technology (AIT), Thailand
Dr. Shobhakar Dhakal is an Associate Professor of Energy Field of Study at Asian Institute of Technology in Thailand. His areas of specializations are quantification and modeling of the direct and indirect energy and carbon emissions, low energy-carbon city scenarios, and climate-mitigation related policy analyses and cross-comparative case studies. Before joining AIT, Dr. Shobhakar Dhakal was an Executive Director of the Global Carbon Project, an international scientific program hosted by the National Institute for Environmental Studies (NIES) in Japan (2006-2012) and a Senior Policy Researcher and the Project Manager of Urban Project of the Institute for Global Environmental Strategies (IGES) Japan (2001-2006). Currently, he is also a visiting Associate Professor to Graduate School of Environmental Studies of Nagoya University in Japan and a Guest Research Scholar to International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria since 2009. Dr. Dhakal is currently serving as one of the Coordinating Lead Authors of the Fifth Assessment Report of the IPCC for the Working Group III dealing with the human settlements and the climate change mitigation. He has served as one of the Lead Authors of the Global Energy Assessment, member of the Consensus Panel on Low Carbon Cities of the Academy of Sciences of South Africa, member of the Cities Energy Modeling Group of the International Energy Agency, and an international expert to the Taskforce on Urban Development and Energy Efficiency of the China Council for International Cooperation on Environment and Development, among others. He has authored over fifty scholarly publications including journal articles, books, and book chapters. He is a senior editor of Carbon Management Journal, member of the editorial board of Urban Climate Journal, member of the board of editorial advisors of International Energy Journal, and he has been a guest editor of four special issues of the journals.



Houghton RA, Woods Hole Research Center, MA,USA
Dr. Richard A. Houghton is Senior Scientist at the Woods Hole Research Center in Falmouth, Massachusetts. The Center in as independent, nonprofit institute focused on environmental science, education, and policy. Dr. Houghton has studied the role of terrestrial ecosystems in the global carbon cycle and climate change for nearly 30 years, in particular documenting changes in land use and determining the sources and sinks of carbon attributable land management. He has participated in IPCC Assessments of Climate Change. Dr. Houghton received his Ph.D. in ecology from the State University of New York at Stony Brook in 1979 and has worked as a research scientist at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York and the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. He has been at the Woods Hole Research Center since 1987, serving as Acting Director in 2009 and serving for two years (1993-1994) as a visiting senior scientist at NASA headquarters in Washington, D.C.




Associate Editors


Bows A, University of Manchester, UK
Alice Bows is a lecturer in Energy and Climate Change in the School of Earth Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences, University of Manchester. Alice trained as an astrophysicist at the University of Leeds, making the transition into climate change through her PhD in climate modelling at Imperial College, London. After her PhD she worked in science communication, returning to academia in 2003 when she joined the Tyndall Centre at the University of Manchester to research conflicts between the UK's climate change and aviation policies and develop energy system scenarios. In 2008 she was appointed as a lecturer with the University of Manchester's Sustainable Consumption Institute (SCI). As a senior interdisciplinary researcher and lecturer, Alice is involved in diverse projects studying greenhouse gas emission pathways, energy demand and supply, aviation and shipping emission apportionment and understanding consumption-production systems in the context of climate change. Alice leads the SCI's Climate Change & Carbon theme, the University of Manchester's Aerospace Research Institute's (UMARI) Environment theme and the Tyndall Centre's Energy Programme.



Cheng Y, R20-Regions of Climate Action, China
Dr. Yufu Cheng is China Country Director for R20: Regions of Climate Actions, Chaired by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. Together with R20 team, members and partners, Dr. Cheng is working with Chinese Central Governments, Subnational Governments, Technology, Policy and Investing Partners to identify and implement the effective low carbon projects in China. He is also a visiting professor at School of Environment and Energy of Peking University. Before joining R20, he was the Senior Vice President of the Innovation Center for Energy and Transportation (iCET) and Dr. Cheng has over 15 years education and working experiences in the Climate Change related programs. He has worked in research, education, standards and policies, capacity building, project development with colleagues and international leading partners on effective solutions on combating Climate Challenges. He has built extensive working relationship with different stakeholders (e.g. governmental agencies, private sectors, foundations, NGOs and research communities) to work together in developing effective low carbon projects, especially in Green Energy and Energy Efficiency areas (e.g. LED lights). Dr. Cheng conducted climate change research in China, the United States, Mexico, and the Arctic Region. He is active in environmental outreach and education and has been interviewed by major Medias (e.g. Los Angeles Times and CCTV) and has been invited to speak at major international environmental conferences, such as United Nations' Global Climate Change Conferences in Copenhagen, Tianjin and Cancun, Governor's Climate Summit (2008, 2009, and 2010), and Climate Summit in China hosted by thirteen Chinese Ministries. He serves as expert committee member on several international conferences. Dr. Cheng received his Ph.D. in Ecology from joint Doctoral Program between the University of California at Davis and San Diego State University in 2003, Master Degree of Ecology from Chinese Academy of Forestry in 1998 and Bachelor Degree of Biological Sciences from Anhui Normal University in 1995.



Fenhann J, UNEP Risoe Centre on Energy, Climate and Sustainable Development, Denmark
Joergen Fenhann, a senior scientist at the UNEP Risoe Centre, has been working in many developing countries on CDM capacity building. He issues monthly the UNEP Risoe CDM/JI Pipeline ( www.cdmpipeline.org ). Joergen was lead author for the Special Report on Emission Scenarios for the IPCC and also a lead author for the energy supply chapter in the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report. Formerly he made the GHG emission inventory and projections for Denmark.






Paustian K, Colorado State University, CO, USA


Wagner F, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), Austria
Fabian Wagner is Senior Research Scholar in the Atmospheric Pollution and Economic Development (APD) Program at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in Austria. Dr. Wagner's expertise ranges from integrated assessment modeling covering energy, socio-economic, biophysical and chemical dimensions, to the economics of climate change mitigation and co-benefit analysis. He has developed the optimization modules of the RAINS/GAINS model family, which have been used in a number of policy applications in Europe and Asia for designing clean air and greenhouse gas mitigation policies. For the development of the 2006 IPCC Guidelines for National GHG Inventories, he has served as a Lead Author (Energy) and Contributing Author (Waste). His current research interests also include risk and uncertainty. Before joining IIASA in 2004, Dr. Wagner worked for the IPCC National Greenhouse Gas Inventories Programme at the Institute for Global Environmental Strategies (IGES) in Hayama, Japan. From 2001-2002 he was a researcher with the International Energy Analysis Group at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), California, before moving to the International Climate Policy group at the Hamburg Institute of International Economics (HWWA), Germany, as a guest researcher. Since 2001 he has repeatedly consulted for the UNFCCC secretariat in Bonn on methods, inventories and emission projections, as well as comparisons of post-Kyoto pledges under the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Kyoto Protocol. Between 1992 and 1995, Dr. Wagner studied physics at the University of Gottingen, Germany. He then moved to Trinity College at the University of Cambridge, UK, from where he obtained the Certificate of Advanced Studies in mathematics ('Part III', 1996), an M.Phil. degree in history and philosophy of science (1997), a diploma in Russian (1999), and finally a PhD in theoretical physics (2001) with a thesis on exactly solvable models and the representation theory of Yang-Baxter algebras.



Editorial Advisory Board



Ackom E, UNEP Risoe Centre on Energy, Climate and Sustainable Development, Denmark
Dr. Emmanuel Ackom works as a Senior Scientist at the UNEP Centre in Denmark. He is also the Programme Officer for UNEP’s Global Energy Network on Sustainable Development (GNESD). In prior affiliations, he was a Research Associate at the University of British Columbia (UBC), Canada where he was cross-appointed to the International Energy Agency Bioenergy (Task 39) Management as Task Coordinator. Dr. Ackom has extensive experience in the field of Environmental and Energy Policy. In the past, he coordinated the Technological Innovations - Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) Project at the University of British Columbia (UBC). He was one of the 5 selected experts to represent Germany at the European Union ECOLIFE II Network. Dr. Ackom worked as Lecturer of Environment and Resource Management at the Brandenburg University of Technology, Germany for a number of years. His current areas of work are in the areas of Energy for Sustainable Development and Technology Need Assessment for CDM projects. He earned his BSc in Food Science from the University of Ghana, MSc and PhD in Environment and Resource Management from the Brandenburg University of Technology, Germany. Dr. Ackom completed his Post Doctoral Research Fellowship with the Sustainable Manufacturing and Industrial Ecology Group at the University of British Columbia, Canada.



Campbell JE, University of California, Merced, CA, USA
Elliott Campbell is an assistant professor at the University of California, Merced with appointments in the Sierra Nevada Research Institute and the School of Engineering. Campbell's research team focuses on carbon cycle science with applications to climate change and bioenergy. Campbell has contributed to state and federal policy reports and has appeared in media from NPR's "Morning Edition" to The Wall Street Journal. He received his BS and MS from Stanford, PhD from the University of Iowa, and completed a postdoc at the Carnegie Institution for Science.





Franzluebbers AJ, USDA Agricultural Research Service, GA, USA
Alan Franzluebbers is a research ecologist at the USDA Agricultural Research Service in Watkinsville, Georgia. The Watkinsville Research Center develops and transfers environmentally sustainable and profitable agricultural management systems to land owners and managers in order to protect the natural resource base, build accord with non-agricultural sectors, and support healthy rural economies. Dr. Franzluebbers' research program focuses on soil organic matter management in sustainable agricultural systems. Conservation tillage, pasture management, and integrated crop-livestock production are topics of current interest. Biological soil quality methods and soil organic carbon sequestration are tools often used to interpret the effects of management on soil resources. He is a research member of the Greenhouse Gas Reduction through Agricultural Carbon Enhancement network (GRACEnet) and serves as co-lead of the Croplands Research Group of the Global Research Alliance on Agricultural Greenhouse Gases.



Friedlingstein P, University of Exeter, U.K.


Grace J, University of Edinburgh, UK


Griffith P, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, USA
Dr Peter Griffith received his PhD in Ecology from the University of Georgia (GA, USA), his MSc in Marine, Estuarine and Environmental Science from the University of Maryland (MD, USA) and a BSc with Honors in Botany and Zoology from Duke University (NC, USA). Dr Griffith is now the founding director of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Carbon Cycle and Ecosystems Office, supporting the North American Carbon Program, a component of the US Global Change Research Program designed to quantify continental-scale carbon sources and sinks in North America, NASA's Arctic Boreal Vulnerability Experiment, and the NASA Carbon Cycle and Ecosystems Focus Area.




Grubler A, Yale University, CT, USA


Gurney K, Purdue University, IN, USA
Kevin Gurney is an Atmospheric Scientist, Ecologist and Policy expert currently working in the areas of carbon cycle science, climate science, and climate science policy at Purdue University where he is Associate Professor in the Earth and Atmospheric Science department and the Agronomy department. Gurney received a BA in Physics from University of California at Berkeley, an MS in Atmospheric Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, an MPP in Public Policy from the University of California at Berkeley, and a Ph.D. in Ecology from Colorado State University. Gurney has worked in NGOs, think tanks, consulting, and academia and has focused on topics within global change and climate change. His recent work involves simulation of the global carbon cycle using the inverse approach, characterizing fossil fuel CO2 in North America (the "Vulcan" and "Hestia" projects), the linkages between terrestrial carbon exchange and climate variability, and deforestation and carbon/climate feedbacks. He also has worked extensively on climate policy and has been involved, for over fifteen years, with the United Nations Climate Change Framework Convention and the Kyoto Protocol.
Gurney has published extensively within the peer-reviewed scientific literature in journals such as Nature, Science, Tellus and the Journal of Geophysical Research, is a contributing author to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's Fourth Assessment Report, and has co-authored a 1995 book with MIT Press, titled Mending the Ozone Hole. Gurney is a member of Phi Kappa Phi honor society, Sigma Xi honor society, the American Geophysical Union, the Ecological Society of America, NOAA's Global Carbon Cycle Science Steering Committee, the Global Carbon Project Science Steering Committee, and NASA's Mid-continent intensive task force. Gurney was one of the IPCC membership that shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with vice-president Al Gore. Gurney was named "Air Conservationist of the Year," by the Indiana Wildlife Federation in 2008 and is a recipient of the prestigious National Science Foundation CAREER award (2009). In addition to carbon cycle science and policy, Gurney has worked on stratospheric ozone depletion, radionuclide dose assessment, energy systems modeling, and climate-economic modeling.


Kejun J, Energy Research Institute, China


Kerr A, E3 International / University of Edinburgh, UK


Kollmuss A, Stockholm Environment Institute - US Center, MA, USA
Anja works in the Climate and Energy Program at SEI focusing on national and international climate mitigation policy. She currently researches cap-and-trade and carbon offset programs. She has written several comprehensive reviews of offset programs and standards. She maintains the Carbon Offset Research and Education- CORE website. Anja was a contributing author to the IPCCs Third Assessment Report were she researched the climate impacts of waste management. She has worked on researching and implementing low-carbon strategies for over 15 years and has extensive experience in energy-efficiency strategies for residential buildings. Anja did her undergraduate studies at the ETH in Switzerland and at Harvard in Biology and Environmental Studies. She holds an MA in Urban and Environmental Planning from Tufts University. For the last 7 years, Anja has worked with Dalit Women Power/Nari Jagran Manch, a women's empowerment organization in rural Bihar, India. She also plays Early Music and Klezmer.



Le Quere C, University of East Anglia, UK


Leach M, University of Surrey, UK


Lehmann J, Cornell University, NY, USA
Johannes Lehmann, associate professor of soil biogeochemistry and soil fertility management at Cornell University, received his graduate degrees in Soil Science at the University of Bayreuth, Germany. During the past 10 years, he has focused on nano-scale investigations of soil organic matter, the biogeochemistry of black carbon and the development of biochar and bioenergy systems.








Litz F, World Resources Institute (WRI), DC, USA


Matthews RB, James Hutton Institute, Aberdeen, UK
Robin Matthews is currently Head of the interdisciplinary Vibrant and Low Carbon Communities Theme at the James Hutton Institute in Aberdeen, Scotland. He obtained a BAgrSc in Agricultural Science from Lincoln University in New Zealand in 1975, and PhD in Genetics from the University of Wales, United Kingdom in 1981, and since then has developed a strong national and international reputation in the field of mitigation and adaptation to climate change by the natural resources sector. This has included crop physiology research at ICRISAT in India, agroforestry research in Zambia, modelling the impact of climate change on growth and yield of rice, the effect of rice cultivation on methane production in south-east Asia, and carbon sequestration under short-rotation coppice bio-energy crops in the UK. His current research interests are in developing and evaluating ways of storing more carbon in landscapes without adversely affecting livelihoods and other ecosystem services. He is currently leading an EU-FP7 project on tropical deforestation, a component of which includes modelling GHGs from land use change on the tropical peatlands of Indonesia. He was an expert reviewer of the IPCC Working Group II of the Fourth Assessment Report, and is a member of the Scottish Giovernment's Agriculture and Climate Change Stakeholder Group. He also led a recent DFID/NERC-funded project under the Ecosystem Services for Poverty Alleviation (ESPA) to build ecosystems services research capacity in East Africa, and in 2009 led a project funded by Defra on baseline methodologies for reducing deforestation in tropical rainforests.



McGlade J, European Environment Agency, Denmark


Nilsson LJ, Lund University, Sweden
Lars J. Nilsson is a Professor of Environmental and Energy Systems Studies at Lund University (2002-), chairman of the LU research portal on Energy (2006-), and a member of the LU Climate Initiative (2008-). He has an MSc degree in Engineering Physics (1987) and a PhD (1993) in Energy and Environmental Studies. He was a visiting research fellow and Fulbright Scholar at Princeton University 1994-1995. His research interests include climate and energy policy as well as energy systems analysis - including technology assessments of sustainable energy technologies and strategies for implementation. Recent research topics include European climate, renewable energy and energy efficiency policy, including CDM. He is Programme Director for "Governing Transitions to Low Carbon Energy and Transport Systems" - a large interdisciplinary research programme 2009-2012.




Ravindranath NH, Indian Institute of Science, India


Reichstein M, Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry Jena, Germany


Sari A, Ecosecurities, Indonesia


Shrestha RM, Asian Institute of Technology, Thailand


Srinivasan A, Asian Development Bank, Philippines


Stephens B, National Center for Atmospheric Research, CO, USA
Britton Stephens is a Scientist III in the Earth Observing Laboratory (EOL) of the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado, U.S.A. Britt received a Bachelor's degree in Earth and Planetary Sciences from Harvard in 1993 and a Ph.D. in Oceanography from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in 1999. Before joining NCAR in 2002, he completed a post-doctoral fellowship with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Carbon Cycle and Greenhouse Gases group. His research has focused on developing and deploying new instruments for tower, ship, and aircraft-based observations of atmospheric O_2 and CO_2 , and on synthesizing data sets and models to elucidate global carbon cycle processes. Britt's carbon-cycle interests span terrestrial ecology, oceanography, atmospheric dynamics, and climate change mitigation. His research contributions include a major revision to model-based estimates of the global distribution of terrestrial and oceanic CO_2 fluxes. He maintains a network of mountain-top CO_2 instruments in the U.S. Rocky Mountains and is a principal investigator on an ongoing global airborne survey of carbon cycle gases.



Turney C, University of New South Wales, Australia





 

 



Williams I, University of Southampton, UK







Yamaji K, University of Tokyo, Japan



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