I think the bigger issue is not just the definitions, but the concept of offsetting fossil emissions by ecosystem removals. Simply not sustainable in the long run
I think the bigger issue is not just the definitions, but the concept of offsetting fossil emissions by ecosystem removals. Simply not sustainable in the long run
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
it’s not small (and ironically can come back to bite you later as the sink may saturate and reverse!)
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
it’s not small (and ironically can come back to bite you later as the sink may saturate and reverse!)
Ultimately “natural” sinks and land-based managed sinks can only offset so much from fossil fuels. Any sustainable “net zero” must mean “geological net zero”
leave it in the ground!
Ultimately “natural” sinks and land-based managed sinks can only offset so much from fossil fuels. Any sustainable “net zero” must mean “geological net zero”
leave it in the ground!
Essentially scientists say “we need net zero”, countries say “we’ve got plans to meet net zero”. But different definitions mean they don’t meet in the middle.
Essentially scientists say “we need net zero”, countries say “we’ve got plans to meet net zero”. But different definitions mean they don’t meet in the middle.
It is by this definition that net zero leads to stopping warming…
It is by this definition that net zero leads to stopping warming…
Does stuff here count as “natural” or “anthropogenic”? Different conventions say both yes and no to this - which leads to different measures of human emissions
Does stuff here count as “natural” or “anthropogenic”? Different conventions say both yes and no to this - which leads to different measures of human emissions