Automated Author ProfileHartikainen, Markus
Silo AI0000-0003-1708-6149
Hartikainen, Markus
Current S-Index
Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets
Average Dataset Index per Dataset
Average Dataset Index per dataset
Total Datasets
Total datasets for this author
Average FAIR Score
Average FAIR Score per dataset
Total Citations
Total citations to the author's datasets
Total Mentions
Total mentions of the author's datasets
S-Index Interpretation
The S-Index (Sharing Index) is a comprehensive metric that represents the cumulative impact of all your datasets. It is calculated as the sum of Dataset Index scores across all your claimed datasets.
What it means:
- A higher S-index indicates greater overall impact of your datasets relative to typical datasets in their fields of research
- The S-Index grows as you add more datasets or as existing datasets gain more citations and mentions
- It provides a single number to track your research data impact over time
Current S-Index: 6.3 (sum of 4 datasets Dataset Index scores)
More information here.
S-Index Over Time
Cumulative Citations Over Time
Cumulative Mentions Over Time
Datasets
The repository contains the data and codes supporting the findings of the study: Climate targets in European timber-producing countries conflict with goals on forest ecosystem services and biodiversity. Abstract: The European Union (EU) set clear climate change mitigation targets to reach climate neutrality, accounting for forests and their woody biomass resources. We investigated the consequences of increased harvest demands resulting from EU climate targets. We analysed the impacts on national policy objectives for forest ecosystem services and biodiversity through empirical forest simulation and multi-objective optimization methods. We show that key European timber-producing countries – Finland, Sweden, Germany (Bavaria) – cannot fulfil the increased harvest demands linked to the ambitious 1.5°C target. Potentials for harvest increase only exists in the studied region Norway. However, focusing on EU climate targets conflicts with several national policies and causes adverse effects on multiple ecosystem services and biodiversity. We argue that the role of forests and their timber resources in achieving climate targets and societal decarbonization should not be overstated. Our study provides insight for other European countries challenged by conflicting policies and supports policymakers.
Authors
- Blattert, Clemens ;
- Mönkkönen, Mikko ;
- Burgas, Daniel ;
- Di Fulvio, Fulvio ;
- Toraño Caicoya, Astor ;
- Vergarechea, Marta ;
- Klein, Julian ;
- Hartikainen, Markus ;
- Antón-Fernández, Clara ;
- Astrup, Rasmus ;
- Emmerich, Michael ;
- Forsell, Nicklas ;
- Lukkarinen, Jani ;
- Lundström, Johanna ;
- Pitzén, Samuli ;
- Poschenrieder, Werner ;
- Primmer, Eeva ;
- Snäll, Tord ;
- Eyvindson, Kyle
The repository contains the data and codes supporting the findings of the study: Climate targets in European timber-producing countries conflict with goals on forest ecosystem services and biodiversity, which can be found in the zip file "euclimate_vs_natpolicy-main.zip". Further, the repository includes the raw forest simulation data used as input for the multi-objective optimizations and the raw optimization outputs of each study region. The codes to run the national optimization can be retrieved from https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6631109. Abstract: The European Union (EU) set clear climate change mitigation targets to reach climate neutrality, accounting for forests and their woody biomass resources. We investigated the consequences of increased harvest demands resulting from EU climate targets. We analysed the impacts on national policy objectives for forest ecosystem services and biodiversity through empirical forest simulation and multi-objective optimization methods. We show that key European timber-producing countries – Finland, Sweden, Germany (Bavaria) – cannot fulfil the increased harvest demands linked to the ambitious 1.5°C target. Potentials for harvest increase only exists in the studied region Norway. However, focusing on EU climate targets conflicts with several national policies and causes adverse effects on multiple ecosystem services and biodiversity. We argue that the role of forests and their timber resources in achieving climate targets and societal decarbonization should not be overstated. Our study provides insight for other European countries challenged by conflicting policies and supports policymakers.
Authors
- Blattert, Clemens ;
- Mönkkönen, Mikko ;
- Burgas, Daniel ;
- Di Fulvio, Fulvio ;
- Toraño Caicoya, Astor ;
- Vergarechea, Marta ;
- Klein, Julian ;
- Hartikainen, Markus ;
- Antón-Fernández, Clara ;
- Astrup, Rasmus ;
- Emmerich, Michael ;
- Forsell, Nicklas ;
- Lukkarinen, Jani ;
- Lundström, Johanna ;
- Pitzén, Samuli ;
- Poschenrieder, Werner ;
- Primmer, Eeva ;
- Snäll, Tord ;
- Eyvindson, Kyle
The repository contains the data and codes supporting the findings of the study: Climate targets in European timber-producing countries conflict with goals on forest ecosystem services and biodiversity, including the raw forest simulation data used as input for the multi-objective optimizations and the raw optimization outputs of each study region. Abstract: The European Union (EU) set clear climate change mitigation targets to reach climate neutrality, accounting for forests and their woody biomass resources. We investigated the consequences of increased harvest demands resulting from EU climate targets. We analysed the impacts on national policy objectives for forest ecosystem services and biodiversity through empirical forest simulation and multi-objective optimization methods. We show that key European timber-producing countries – Finland, Sweden, Germany (Bavaria) – cannot fulfil the increased harvest demands linked to the ambitious 1.5°C target. Potentials for harvest increase only exists in the studied region Norway. However, focusing on EU climate targets conflicts with several national policies and causes adverse effects on multiple ecosystem services and biodiversity. We argue that the role of forests and their timber resources in achieving climate targets and societal decarbonization should not be overstated. Our study provides insight for other European countries challenged by conflicting policies and supports policymakers.
Authors
- Blattert, Clemens ;
- Mönkkönen, Mikko ;
- Burgas, Daniel ;
- Di Fulvio, Fulvio ;
- Toraño Caicoya, Astor ;
- Vergarechea, Marta ;
- Klein, Julian ;
- Hartikainen, Markus ;
- Antón-Fernández, Clara ;
- Astrup, Rasmus ;
- Emmerich, Michael ;
- Forsell, Nicklas ;
- Lukkarinen, Jani ;
- Lundström, Johanna ;
- Pitzén, Samuli ;
- Poschenrieder, Werner ;
- Primmer, Eeva ;
- Snäll, Tord ;
- Eyvindson, Kyle
The repository contains the data and codes supporting the findings of the study: Climate targets in European timber-producing countries conflict with goals on forest ecosystem services and biodiversity, which can be found in the zip file "euclimate_vs_natpolicy-main.zip". Further, the repository includes the raw forest simulation data used as input for the multi-objective optimizations and the raw optimization outputs of each study region. The codes to run the national optimization can be retrieved from https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6631109. Abstract: The European Union (EU) set clear climate change mitigation targets to reach climate neutrality, accounting for forests and their woody biomass resources. We investigated the consequences of increased harvest demands resulting from EU climate targets. We analysed the impacts on national policy objectives for forest ecosystem services and biodiversity through empirical forest simulation and multi-objective optimization methods. We show that key European timber-producing countries – Finland, Sweden, Germany (Bavaria) – cannot fulfil the increased harvest demands linked to the ambitious 1.5°C target. Potentials for harvest increase only exists in the studied region Norway. However, focusing on EU climate targets conflicts with several national policies and causes adverse effects on multiple ecosystem services and biodiversity. We argue that the role of forests and their timber resources in achieving climate targets and societal decarbonization should not be overstated. Our study provides insight for other European countries challenged by conflicting policies and supports policymakers.
Authors
- Blattert, Clemens ;
- Mönkkönen, Mikko ;
- Burgas, Daniel ;
- Di Fulvio, Fulvio ;
- Toraño Caicoya, Astor ;
- Vergarechea, Marta ;
- Klein, Julian ;
- Hartikainen, Markus ;
- Antón-Fernández, Clara ;
- Astrup, Rasmus ;
- Emmerich, Michael ;
- Forsell, Nicklas ;
- Lukkarinen, Jani ;
- Lundström, Johanna ;
- Pitzén, Samuli ;
- Poschenrieder, Werner ;
- Primmer, Eeva ;
- Snäll, Tord ;
- Eyvindson, Kyle