Could cutting down trees and burying them help fight global
warming? An article in this week's issue of New
Scientist suggests so.
Ning Zeng, an atmospheric scientist at the University of
Maryland in College Park, tells New Scientist that thinning
forests and burying "excess wood" in a manner in
which its didn't decay could sequester enough carbon to offset
all of our fossil-fuel emissions.
"Zeng gives an example of a plot of 1 square kilometre
(100 hectares), with the excess wood from 1 hectare of woodland
buried deeper than 5 metres and down to 20 metres," writes
Richard Lovett of New Scientist, referring to Zeng's research
published in Carbon Balance and Management. "He calculates
that this could sequester 1 tonne of carbon per hectare —
using that land to grow trees would sequester 1 to 5 tonnes,
depending on the age of the forest and the type of tree."
(Article continues below)
"He estimates that offsetting all of the world's current
emissions would be achievable with a workforce of one million
people — substantially fewer than those already employed
in the forestry industry in the US alone," Lovett continues.
"Even so, to offset all our emissions, most of the world's
forests would have to run a wood burial scheme."
New Scientist notes that Zeng's idea is not a new one —
ancient indigenous groups used a similar approach known as
biochar to enrich the nutrient-poor soils of the Amazon rainforest.
"More than 500 years ago Amazonian people were creating
almost pure carbon by smouldering their domestic waste and
letting it work its way into the soil. This earth, known as
terra preta ('black earth') remains to this day," Lovett
writes. "Ancient farmers had no idea that they were sequestering
carbon, of course, but they did know that adding biochar to
the soil hugely increased its quality."
Lovett cites a modern example in hydrothermal carbonization,
a process which chars organic material under pressure. He
says the technique could eventually be used on an industrial
scale and may qualify for carbon credits, assuming it could
avoid generating methane, another potent greenhouse gas.
Full
article here.