Carbon Management
Published by Taylor & Francis
ISSN : 1758-3004 eISSN : 1758-3012
Abbreviation : Carbon Manag.
Aims & Scope
Carbon Management is a scholarly peer-reviewed forum for insights from the diverse array of disciplines that enhance our understanding of carbon dioxide and other GHG interactions – from biology, ecology, chemistry and engineering to law, policy, economics and sociology.
The core aim of Carbon Management is it to examine the options and mechanisms for mitigating the causes and impacts of climate change, which includes mechanisms for reducing emissions and enhancing the removal of GHGs from the atmosphere, as well as metrics used to measure performance of options and mechanisms resulting from international treaties, domestic policies, local regulations, environmental markets, technologies, industrial efforts and consumer choices.
One key aim of the journal is to catalyse intellectual debate in an inclusive and scientific manner on the practical work of policy implementation related to the long-term effort of managing our global GHG emissions and impacts.
Decisions made in the near future will have profound impacts on the global climate and biosphere.
Carbon Management delivers research findings in an accessible format to inform decisions in the fields of research, education, management and environmental policy.
View Aims & ScopeMetrics & Ranking
Impact Factor
Year | Value |
---|---|
2025 | 3.2 |
2024 | 2.80 |
Journal Rank
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | 7736 |
Journal Citation Indicator
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | 460 |
SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | 0.726 |
Quartile
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | Q2 |
h-index
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | 52 |
Impact Factor Trend
Abstracting & Indexing
Journal is indexed in leading academic databases, ensuring global visibility and accessibility of our peer-reviewed research.
Subjects & Keywords
Journal’s research areas, covering key disciplines and specialized sub-topics in Environmental Science, designed to support cutting-edge academic discovery.
Licensing & Copyright
This journal operates under an Open Access model. Articles are freely accessible to the public immediately upon publication. The content is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), allowing users to share and adapt the work with proper attribution.
Copyright remains with the author(s), and no permission is required for non-commercial use, provided the original source is cited.
Policy Links
This section provides access to essential policy documents, guidelines, and resources related to the journal’s publication and submission processes.
- Aims scope
- Homepage
- Oa statement
- Author instructions
- License terms
- Review url
- Board url
- Copyright url
- Plagiarism url
- Preservation url
- Apc url
- License
Plagiarism Policy
This journal follows a plagiarism policy. All submitted manuscripts are screened using reliable plagiarism detection software to ensure originality and academic integrity. Authors are responsible for proper citation and acknowledgment of all sources, and any form of plagiarism, including self-plagiarism, will not be tolerated.
For more details, please refer to our official: Plagiarism Policy.
APC Details
The journal’s Article Processing Charge (APC) policies support open access publishing in Environmental Science, ensuring accessibility and quality in research dissemination.
This journal requires an Article Processing Charge (APC) to support open access publishing, covering peer review, editing, and distribution. The current APC is 2,195.00 USD. Learn more.
Explore journals without APCs for alternative publishing options.
Most Cited Articles
The Most Cited Articles section features the journal's most impactful research, based on citation counts. These articles have been referenced frequently by other researchers, indicating their significant contribution to their respective fields.
-
Global soil carbon: understanding and managing the largest terrestrial carbon pool
Citation: 1047
Authors: Jörn PW, Edmund VJ, Roland, Valerie
-
Review of the stability of biochar in soils: predictability of O:C molar ratios
Citation: 827
Authors: Kurt A
-
Advances in remote sensing technology and implications for measuring and monitoring forest carbon stocks and change
Citation: 265
Authors: Scott, Ralph
-
Shifting paradigms: development of high-efficiency biochar fertilizers based on nano-structures and soluble components
Citation: 263
Authors: S, ER, C, P, S, T, S, C, H, GX, L, P, A, J
-
‘Carbon footprinting’: towards a universally accepted definition
Citation: 256
Authors: Laurence A, Simon, Ian
-
Life cycle impacts of forest management and wood utilization on carbon mitigation: knowns and unknowns
Citation: 198
Authors: Bruce, Elaine, Rob, Kenneth, Leif, Roger
-
Does financial development asymmetrically affect CO<sub>2</sub>emissions in China? An application of the nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag (NARDL) model
Citation: 185
Authors: Manzoor, Zeeshan, Zia, Shehzad
-
Quantifying carbon for agricultural soil management: from the current status toward a global soil information system
Citation: 169
Authors: Keith, Sarah, Jeff, Rachel, Jeff, Marcia, Jennifer, Ben, Stefan, Tom, Bram, Mike, Mark, R. César, Mikuláš, Brian, Elizabeth, Charles, Ross, Nathaniel, Rastislav, William, Molly
-
The feasibility and costs of biochar deployment in the UK
Citation: 160
Authors: Simon, Jim, John, Rodrigo