Sorry, 
I don't know much, but this is something I actually do know
about. And this article really got my goat, as it were. 

----- Original Message -----
From: "Chip Mefford" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: sustainablelorgbiofuel@sustainablelists.org
Sent: Tuesday, June 21, 2011 2:41:08 PM
Subject: Re: [Biofuel] Trees not cure for global warming

Trees do a whole lot more than 'just' sink carbon. 

and 'we' are losing forests, not gaining forests. 

Net LOSS

Not Net Gain. 


----- Original Message -----
From: "Bruno M." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, June 20, 2011 9:24:07 PM
Subject: [Biofuel] Trees not cure for global warming

FYI:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

www.leaderpost.com/technology/Study%20trees%20cure%20global%20warming/4967756/story.html

By Margaret Munro, Postmedia News June 18, 2011

Study: trees not cure for global warming

Planting trees may help appease travellers' guilt about pumping carbon 
into the atmosphere.

But new research suggests it will do little to cool the planet, 
especially when trees are planted in Canada and other northern 
countries, says climatologist Alvaro Montenegro, at St. Francis Xavier 
University in Nova Scotia.

"There is no magic bullet" for global warming, says Montenegro, "and 
trees are certainly not going to be providing it."

He assessed the impact of replanting forests on crop and marginal lands 
with Environment Canada researcher Vivek Arora. Their study, published 
Sunday in Nature Geoscience, concludes "afforestation is not a 
substitute for reduced greenhouse-gas emissions."

The United Nations, environmental groups and carbon-offset companies are 
invested heavily in the idea that planting trees will help slow climate 
change and global warming. International authorities have long described 
"afforestation" as a key climate-change mitigation strategy.

But the study says the benefits of tree planting are "marginal" when it 
comes to stopping the planet from overheating.

Trees do suck carbon out of the air, but the study highlights that their 
dark leaves and needles also decrease the amount of solar radiation that 
gets reflected by the landscape, which has a warming effect.

Cropland - especially snow-covered cropland - has a cooling effect 
because it reflects a lot more solar energy than forests, the scientists 
say. This so-called "albedo effect" is important and needs to be 
incorporated into assessments of tree planting programs and projects, 
the researchers say.

Montenegro and Arora stress that planting forests has many benefits - 
trees provide habitat for wildlife and prevent soil erosion. And 
planting forests does help reduce atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide 
because carbon is locked into wood as trees grow.

But planting trees will have only a modest effect on the global 
temperature, according to their study, which used a sophisticated 
climate modelling system developed by Environment Canada.
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