When and How to Leverage Family Forest Carbon

Landowner Susan Benedict (PA) with foresters.
Growing stakeholder and investor pressure for climate change commitments has resulted in numerous corporate announcements of publicly declared reduction targets, including Amazon, Microsoft, BMW and many more. In fact, research by Natural Capital Partners found that 23% of Fortune 500 companies have committed to achieving audacious climate goals for 2030, including going carbon neutral, using 100% renewable energy, or meeting a Science-Based Target Initiative (SBTi) target.
While these declarations make headlines regarding WHAT companies will do, what is missing in the fine print of these articles are HOW the company will actually achieve these goals.
But how does a company begin to systemically address their carbon footprint? Perhaps the answer lies in a framework used by conservationists for over a century, the carbon mitigation hierarchy.
The carbon mitigation hierarchy is a blueprint for aligning corporate actions for climate change with the dynamics of natural systems and prioritizing the actions that lead to the best outcomes for people and nature. The hierarchy calls for companies to address climate change in a certain order:

Avoid: Avoid creating impacts from the outset;
Reduce: Reduce the intensity and/or extent of impacts that cannot be completely avoided;
Restore: Restore degraded ecosystems or capture some energy/material benefit;
Compensate: Compensate for any significant residual, adverse impacts that cannot be avoided, reduced, and/or restored;
Offset: A type of compensation measure combined with a negative impact to produce a “net” or “neutral” outcome.
It is important to note that the hierarchy places more direct actions such as avoidance at the top and more indirect actions like offsets at the bottom, ensuring that companies seek out all potential means for directly reducing their GHG emissions BEFORE seeking out offsets.
The American Forest Foundation (AFF) and our partner The Nature Conservancy (TNC) believe all of the components of the carbon mitigation hierarchy need to be a part of a company’s climate strategy. Once those collective efforts have been exhausted, the Family Forest Carbon Program can help corporations take the last step needed to achieve their goals. The Family Forest Carbon Program offers a path for companies to address their outstanding or residual emissions or the emissions in their supply chain through carbon credits.
The dedication and hard work of America’s family forest owners can help corporations reach the finish line, yet the real work begins at the starting line.
Related Articles

June 3, 2025
Why Wildlife Loves Loblolly—And How These Pines Can Benefit Your Land
A quiet stretch of pine trees can offer more than just scenery—it can provide vital habitat for wildlife across every season. Loblolly pine, the most common native tree species in the Southeast, plays a particularly important role in creating habitat for a wide variety of game and non-game species, from wild turkeys and rabbits to songbirds and squirrels.

May 28, 2025
New Report Details Innovative Approach to Permanence for Natural Climate Solutions
The American Forest Foundation released today “A Trust for Permanence: Enabling a New Generation of Permanent Nature-Based Credits in the Voluntary Carbon Market,” a new concept paper that details an innovative approach to ensuring the quality and integrity of credits produced through natural climate solutions (NCS).

May 20, 2025
In Historic First, Program Enrolls 1,000 Family Landowners in New Market Opportunity
The American Forest Foundation announced today that their Family Forest Carbon Program (FFCP) has reached a critical milestone, enrolling 1,000 landowners, who now have access to income through the voluntary carbon market. This is the first and only forest carbon program to enroll these many small-acreage landowners in the nation.