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AgingAmerican

(12,958 posts)
Thu Nov 29, 2012, 09:42 AM Nov 2012

To what extent could planting trees help solve climate change?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/nov/29/planting-trees-climate-change

Forests play an important an important role in climate change. The destruction and degradation of forests contributes to the problem through the release of CO2. But the planting of new forests can help mitigate against climate change by removing CO2 from the atmosphere. Combined with the sun's energy, the captured carbon is converted into trunks, branches, roots and leaves via the process of photosynthesis. It is stored in this "biomass" until being returned back into the atmosphere, whether through natural processes or human interference, thus completing the carbon cycle.

Tree planting and plantation forestry are well established both in the private and public sectors. The most recent data released by the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation suggest that plantation forests comprised an estimated 7% of global forest area in 2010. Most of these forests were established in areas that were previously not under forest cover, at least in recent years. Trees are also planted as part of efforts to restore natural forests as well as in agroforestry, which involves increasing tree cover on agricultural land and pastures.

Under certain conditions plantations can grow relatively fast, thus absorbing CO2 at higher rates than natural forests. In the absence of major disturbances, newly planted or regenerating forests can continue to absorb carbon for 20–50 years or more. In comparison to preventing the loss of natural forests, however, tree planting has the potential to make only a limited contribution to reducing CO2 levels in the atmosphere. In 2000, the IPCC gathered the available evidence for a special report which concluded that tree-planting could sequester (remove from the atmosphere) around 1.1–1.6 GT of CO2 per year. That compares to total global greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to 50 GT of CO2 in 2004.

Unlike measures to reduce deforestation, tree planting and reforestation were included as activities eligible for finance under the Kyoto protocol. Kyoto's rules and procedures, however, restricted the scale and scope of these activities. As a result, projects have struggled to get off the ground and the carbon sequestered has been almost negligible. Outside of Kyoto, some tree-planting projects established to absorb CO2 have turned out to be nonviable due to the cost of acquiring inputs or protecting young trees from fire, drought, pests or diseases. The cost of land is another barrier to widespread tree-planting, especially where there is competition with other land uses such as food or biofuel production.

As negotiations over the future of Kyoto continue, the extent of the possible role of tree planting in a future climate change framework remains unclear. Tree planting is, however, unlikely to be implemented on a scale to reach even the relatively modest potential contribution outlined by the IPPC – especially in the absence of a high carbon price.

• This article was written by Dr Charles Palmer
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To what extent could planting trees help solve climate change? (Original Post) AgingAmerican Nov 2012 OP
Tree planting helps, but is not a panacea, ... CRH Nov 2012 #1
It depends on where we plant them NoOneMan Nov 2012 #2
Re: Planting Trees Conium Nov 2012 #3

CRH

(1,553 posts)
1. Tree planting helps, but is not a panacea, ...
Thu Nov 29, 2012, 10:18 AM
Nov 2012

especially if the tree is planted to be harvested soon. Some trees, that can in the future be used in construction or cabinetry, extends the time of sequestration.

Trees planted in deforested areas certainly helps the CO2 problem, but is not of a scale that could offset millions of tail pipes, heater vents, smoke stacks, or ancient defrosting forests emitting green house gases.

 

NoOneMan

(4,795 posts)
2. It depends on where we plant them
Thu Nov 29, 2012, 11:18 AM
Nov 2012

Planting them on New York City would have a substantial benefit (other than the carbon from running the bulldozers)

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