http://time.com/4734856/bloomberg-climate-hope/

[image: climate-of-hope]
St. Martin's Press
CLIMATE <http://time.com/tag/climate>
Bloomberg and Pope: Plants Are the Key to Repairing Climate Damage
Michael Bloomberg and Carl Pope
<http://time.com/author/michael-bloomberg/?xid=homepage>
Apr 18, 2017
<http://time.com/4734856/bloomberg-climate-hope/#>
<http://time.com/4734856/bloomberg-climate-hope/#>
IDEAS
*Bloomberg, the founder and CEO of Bloomberg LLP, was the mayor of New York
City from 2002 to 2013.*

What happens if we do bust the 1,000-gigaton carbon
<http://time.com/4728717/climate-change-carbon-dioxide-levels/> budget? We
can still bring concentrations of those gases back down to a level that
sustains a stable climate. We won’t get back quite the climate of the last
500 years, but we can shoot for one that future generations can adjust to.
We have some time — remember, climate
<http://time.com/4731632/climate-change-2020-trump/> steers slowly and
sluggishly, like a ship or plane, not all at once. If we go over our
emissions budget briefly but promptly start reducing concentrations, we can
eventually heal the climate, even though repair will take decades to be
felt.

Here as elsewhere, the key to unlocking the climate puzzle is to realize
that if we handle other pieces of our business better — in this case,
stewardship of vital food, timber, and water sources like wetlands,
mangroves, forests, prairies, and peat bogs — we will simultaneously make
major strides toward a safer climate and a cooler world. Investment in
ecosystems is vital if we want them to thrive and then do what they are
superbly equipped to do — suck carbon out of the atmosphere and turn it
into soil and vegetation.

When scientists refer to this conversion of CO2 from a gas into organic
matter as negative emissions, it sounds preposterous. But it’s actually
not. After all, it took the intervention of an industrial civilization,
wastefully extracting enormous quantities of fossil fuels, breeding
billions of cattle, and using large volumes of disruptive chemicals like
HFCs, to disrupt the climate in the first place. Prior to this disruption,
atmospheric concentrations of CO2 periodically went down, as oceans,
forests, and soils sucked more CO2 out of the air than volcanoes and fires
put back in. Global CO2 levels in 1750 were lower than they had been in
1500. Only with the Industrial Revolution did they begin their steady
climb. Cooling, as well as warming, is in the Earth’s tool kit.

Here’s how it works. Natural processes scrub black carbon and methane out
of the atmosphere fast — in twenty years, both they and their warming
impact on the climate are gone. HFCs and nitrous oxide hang around for a
long time—but if we implement the global agreement phasing out HFCs and
also phase out excessive fertilizer use, they won’t take us close to the
1.5-degree redline.
<http://time.com/4709796/trump-epa-climate-fossil-fuels/>
CLIMATE CHANGE <http://time.com/tag/climate-change>Trump’s Pro-Coal Orders
Are Doomed to Fail <http://time.com/4709796/trump-epa-climate-fossil-fuels/>
<http://time.com/>
<http://time.com/4687154/antarctica-temperature-climate-change/>
CLIMATE CHANGE <http://time.com/tag/climate-change>Antarctica Hit a Record
High Temperature
<http://time.com/4687154/antarctica-temperature-climate-change/>
<http://time.com/>
Latest from Time Inc
Sign Up For Our Newsletter
[image: TOPSHOT-US-VOTE-DEBATE]
<http://time.com/4524793/we-never-talk-anymore/>
INNOVATION <http://time.com/tag/innovation>We Never Talk Anymore
<http://time.com/4524793/we-never-talk-anymore/>
<http://time.com/>
[image: Stephen Hawking attends the EE British Academy Film Awards at The
Royal Opera House on February 8, 2015 in London, England.]
<http://time.com/4502561/donald-trump-stephen-hawking-climate-change/>
2016 ELECTION <http://time.com/tag/2016-election>Stephen Hawking and
Hundreds of Other Scientists Are Slamming Donald Trump
<http://time.com/4502561/donald-trump-stephen-hawking-climate-change/>
<http://time.com/>
<http://time.com/4495041/ben-jerrys-puts-its-own-ice-cream-flavors-on-endangered-pints-list-due-to-climate-change/>
FOOD & DRINK <http://time.com/tag/food-drink>Ben & Jerry's Puts Its Own Ice
Cream Flavors on 'Endangered Pints' List Due to Climate Change
<http://time.com/4495041/ben-jerrys-puts-its-own-ice-cream-flavors-on-endangered-pints-list-due-to-climate-change/>
<http://time.com/>
[image: Leonardo DiCaprio accepts the award for Best Actor at the Oscars on
Feb. 28, 2016 in Hollywood, Calif.]
<http://time.com/4441219/leonardo-dicaprio-oscars-climate-change/>
SCIENCE <http://time.com/tag/time-section-science>How Leonardo DiCaprio Got
People to Care About Climate Change
<http://time.com/4441219/leonardo-dicaprio-oscars-climate-change/>
<http://time.com/>
[image: Western Wildfires]
<http://time.com/4372731/wild-fires-heat-wave-incoming-west-coast/>
WEATHER <http://time.com/tag/weather>U.S. Wildfires Rage on With
Triple-Digit Heat Wave on the Way
<http://time.com/4372731/wild-fires-heat-wave-incoming-west-coast/>
<http://time.com/>
[image: Children play cricket in the dried-up Chandola Lake on a hot summer
day in Ahmedabad, India on May 27, 2016.]
<http://time.com/4367970/wmo-un-climate-warming-global-nasa/>
ENVIRONMENT <http://time.com/tag/environment>The UN's Weather Agency Warns
of 'Fundamental Change' in Climate
<http://time.com/4367970/wmo-un-climate-warming-global-nasa/>
<http://time.com/>

That leaves CO2. It can last for a thousand years, but only if it remains
in the atmosphere, and most of it doesn’t. Right now, only 1 percent of
stored carbon is in the atmosphere; 30 percent is in soil and vegetation;
13 percent is stored in reserves of coal
<http://time.com/4728550/trump-coal-west-virginia/>, oil
<http://time.com/4714686/dakota-access-pipeline-oil-missouri-river/>,
and natural
gas <http://time.com/4406405/natural-gas-climate-change-energy/>; and a
whopping 56 percent is in the ocean. So once we phase out HFCs and minimize
methane, black carbon, and nitrous oxide emissions, our task is to store
more and more of the world’s carbon not in the sky (where it disrupts
climate) and not in oceans (which it causes to become acidified and
damaged) but in soils and vegetation, where that CO2 is the key to
beneficial results, including higher crop yields and more effective water
storage. More carbon in the sky is a threat. Carbon in soils and forests is
an asset.

We have phenomenal machines to do this job — they are called plants, and
they exist to take CO2 out of the atmosphere and turn it into organic
matter in the soil. (Certain kinds of rocks also sequester CO2 in very
large quantities, but our ability to influence the pace of such
mineralization is much more limited than our impact on the biosphere and
plant life.) What does it take to trip the biosphere — the globe’s
collection of animals and plants — into a massive carbon-storing mechanism?

We simply have to protect valuable natural ecosystems like peat bogs and
mangroves, start planting and growing more trees than we cut, adopt farming
practices that treat soil as a primary asset rather than stripping it of
nutrients and carbon, and allow grasslands to be grazed in ways that
enhance, rather than destroy, their productivity. Healthier agriculture and
forestry, in all their forms, are the keys to reducing atmospheric
concentrations of CO2.

There are other strategies. A fair amount of scientific research is
pursuing engineering strategies to “capture” CO2 even once it is released
in the atmosphere. Exxon-Mobil is a partner in a major fuel cell project,
which combines CO2 from flue gases with natural gas to create electricity.
Whether these pilots can, in a near future, be scaled at an affordable
level is uncertain, but it seems only prudent to support the needed
research to explore them.

One thing is certain: The use of plants to reduce climate risk is ready and
able to go — today.

*From *Climate of Hope <https://www.climateofhope.com/>* by Michael
Bloomberg and Carl Pope. Copyright © 2017 by the authors and reprinted with
permission of St. Martin's Press, LLC.*

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to