Reforestation (replanting trees in deforested
areas) and afforestation (planting trees in previously non-forested areas) does
not sound like anything new. I’m sure your familiar with the ‘3 tree promise’
that has heavily featured as part of toilet paper adverts in the past. However,
what makes reforestation and afforestation a geoengineering method is the scale
and intent to remove carbon from the atmosphere.
How many trees?
It is widely agreed that net-zero carbon emissions will have to be
reached to meet the 2oC or 1.5 oC
target by 2100. In terms of personal carbon emissions, there’s a
handy online calculator. This works out a rough estimate of the number of trees
required to offset your personal carbon emissions, based on your lifestyle.
Even with my vegetarian student lifestyle, I got 3.5 trees….per month.
How do you compare?
Assuming there’s around 7.46
billion people, with my lifestyle we would need to plant 26.11
billion trees each month. Putting this into context, with 390 billion trees in the Amazon Rainforest, we
would have to plant the equivalent of the Amazon every 15 months to
offset carbon emissions, if everyone lived as I do.
Other issues?
Aside from the huge amount of trees required,
initially the idea of planting trees is pretty straightforward. Particularly as
it is fairly easy to quantify and allows us to ‘offset’ our actions. However, Abiodan et al. (2012) modelled impacts of
large-scale afforestation in Nigeria, finding there would be more rainfall in
afforested areas and less rainfall in non-afforested areas, along with
increased extreme events such as droughts. Not only in Nigeria, but also in the
surrounding countries. This is due to changes in evapotranspiration affecting
local climates, as in the diagram below. Similarly, Dickinson
et al. (2013) found afforestation led to net warming in dry regions
of China, where the lower albedo and changes in the heat and radiation
transport cause local warming.
Impacts of the forest on rainfall. The forest
increases 'recycled rain' through evapotranspiration, because the
trees transfer water from the soil to the atmosphere.
Increasing rainfall in forested areas influences the wider
climate system, leading to decreases elsewhere (Aragao, 2012)
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Personally, I don’t think trees are the answer to
meeting the climate targets. I’m certainly not against replacing trees we’ve
already cut down, and there are plenty of those, but as a long term solution I
feel the impacts won’t be large enough.
Hey, really interesting blog! I did the tree test and I would need to plant 6.6 trees a month to offset my carbon emissions! I have a few friends who now are vegetarian due to meat production having such a massive impact on the environment. I never actually knew it made such an impact....or perhaps I decided to ignore it. Either way, I will be trying to consume less meat as a result.
ReplyDeleteThat's great to hear! It really shows how different personal emissions can be!
ReplyDelete