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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Nature-based carbon removal can help protect us from a warming planet
by Staff Writers
Burnaby, Canada (SPX) Mar 30, 2022

a Our scenario of reversed historical deforestation led to a global land carbon increase of 129 GtCO2, which occurred primarily in tropical and subtropical regions. b The primary biophysical effect of expanded forest cover was to decrease land surface albedo in areas of significant reforestation. d These surface albedo decreases led to a spatial pattern of warming that was concentrated in areas of larger forest cover increase, whereas c the cooling due to carbon sequestration was larger at higher latitudes owing to regionally stronger climate feedbacks. e Consequently, the pattern of the net climate response to reforestation showed cooling over most of the land areas, but a small net warming over some tropical continental regions.

A new study finds that temporary nature-based carbon removal can lower global peak warming levels but only if complemented by ambitious fossil fuel emission reductions.

Nature-based climate solutions aim to preserve and enhance carbon storage in terrestrial or aquatic ecosystems and could be a potential contributor to Canada's climate change mitigation strategy. "However, the risk is that carbon stored in ecosystems could be lost back to the atmosphere as a result of wildfires, insect outbreaks, deforestation or other human activities," says Kirsten Zickfeld, a distinguished professor of climate science in Simon Fraser University's Department of Geography who is on the research team.

The researchers used a global climate model to simulate temperature change through two scenarios ranging from weak to ambitious greenhouse gas emissions reductions. In the relatively weak emissions reduction scenario, carbon emissions continue through 2100. In the ambitious scenario carbon emissions reach net-zero by 2050.

In order to meet the Paris Agreement's climate goals, the world will need to reach net-zero CO2 emissions around or before mid-century, according to the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

In both scenarios, it is assumed that carbon storage through nature-based climate solutions is temporary as forests are vulnerable to both natural and human disturbances. Therefore, nature-based climate solutions are anticipated to withdraw carbon from the atmosphere over the next 30 years then slowly release the carbon during the second half of the century.

The team found that in a scenario with carbon emissions decreasing rapidly to net-zero, temporary nature-based carbon storage can decrease the level of peak warming. However, in a scenario with continued carbon emissions temporary nature-based carbon storage would serve only to delay the temperature increase.

"Our study shows that nature-based carbon storage, even if temporary, can have tangible climate benefits, but only if implemented alongside a rapid transition to zero fossil-fuel emissions," says Zickfeld.

Zickfeld is also the lead author of the recent United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Working Group I contribution to the Sixth Assessment Report released in summer 2021, and the IPCC's 2018 special report on the global warming of 1.5 degrees.

The researchers also note that investing in protecting and restoring nature offers social and environmental benefits for local and Indigenous communities beyond storing carbon to mitigate climate change. They add that biodiversity, water and air quality are inherently valuable and that efforts to enhance these can also help to build community resilience to climate change.

The findings are published in Communications Earth and Environment.

Research Report: "Temporary nature-based carbon removal can lower peak warming in a well-below 2C scenario"


Related Links
Simon Fraser University
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation


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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Canada announces billions in new climate spending
Ottawa (AFP) March 29, 2022
More electric vehicles and green energy were among the measures Prime Minister Justin Trudeau laid out Tuesday under a multibillion-dollar plan for how Canada will meet its carbon emissions target. In a speech in Vancouver announcing Can$9.1 billion (US$7.3 billion) in climate actions, the prime minister linked Europe's desire to wean itself off Russian oil and gas after the invasion of Ukraine to a broader global push toward renewable energy. "The leaders I spoke with in Europe over the past fe ... read more

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