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Annual carbon emissions from land-use change in China from 1000 to 2019

  • Fan Yang
  • , Guanpeng Dong*
  • , Xiaoyu Meng
  • , Richard A. Houghton
  • , Yang Gao
  • , Fanneng He*
  • , Meijiao Li
  • , Wenjin Li
  • , Bing Li
  • , Zhihao Liu
  • , Qinqin Mao
  • , Pengfei Wu
  • , Yuanzhi Yao
  • , Xudong Zhai
  • , Hongjuan Zhang
  • , Chao Yue*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Henan University
  • Henan University
  • Woodwell Climate Research Center
  • CAS - Institute of Geographical Sciences and Natural Resources Research
  • Shanxi University of Finance and Economics
  • Ltd.
  • Northwest Agriculture and Forestry University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Long-term land-use changes have a profound impact on terrestrial ecosystems and the associated carbon balance. Current estimates of China's historical carbon emissions induced by land-use change vary widely. Here, current mainland China was taken as the study area, and the 32 provincial units (excluding Macao and Hong Kong) were merged into 25 regions. We utilized a bookkeeping method to quantify China's annual carbon budget resulting from land-use change between 1000 and 2019, driven by a millennial dataset of land-use change in China at provincial level, assisted by comprehensive soil and vegetation carbon density datasets. This approach, which was supported by high-confidence land-use change data, a comprehensive carbon density database compiled from over 10 000 existing field samples, and the latest published disturbance-response curves, enhanced the accuracy of carbon budget estimates. The results revealed that cumulative carbon emissions from land-use change in China reached 19.61 Pg C over the past millennium. Moreover, critical turning points occurred in the early 18th century and early 1980s, with emissions accelerating in the 18th century and transitioning from carbon source to carbon sink in the early 1980s. Our findings revealed that the values were 68 %–328 % higher than the previous 300-year estimates, suggesting that historical carbon emissions from land-use change in China may have been significantly underestimated. This study provides a robust historical baseline for assessing both present and future terrestrial ecosystem carbon budgets at national and provincial scales. The dataset is available at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14557386 (Yang et al., 2025).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)875-902
Number of pages28
JournalEarth System Science Data
Volume18
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 3 Feb 2026

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 15 - Life on Land
    SDG 15 Life on Land

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