Anyway. I agree trees are over-sold. They aren't going to solve everything, they bring risks, and are easy to get wrong. But I'm also conscious of throwing the baby out with the bathwater
October 16, 2025 at 12:14 PM
Anyway. I agree trees are over-sold. They aren't going to solve everything, they bring risks, and are easy to get wrong. But I'm also conscious of throwing the baby out with the bathwater
Yes, peatland restoration is arguably a higher priority. I don't think that means we should do 0 woodland creation until peatlands are 100% restored. Wouldn't we get more diverse benefits from investing in diverse solutions?
October 16, 2025 at 12:12 PM
Yes, peatland restoration is arguably a higher priority. I don't think that means we should do 0 woodland creation until peatlands are 100% restored. Wouldn't we get more diverse benefits from investing in diverse solutions?
How do you judge significance though? Lots of solutions have small effects. Should I just buy a second car? It won't significantly increase global emissions.
Agree about time, but won't we be grateful for a stronger (or less weak!) land sink in 30 years time? Doesn't every tCO2 matter?
October 16, 2025 at 8:53 AM
How do you judge significance though? Lots of solutions have small effects. Should I just buy a second car? It won't significantly increase global emissions.
Agree about time, but won't we be grateful for a stronger (or less weak!) land sink in 30 years time? Doesn't every tCO2 matter?
I've considered it. Interested to know how the data are labelled - e.g. could you filter by season, activity type, year? This paper found a relationship between heatmap intensity and brown bear usage, by screen-grabbing and georeferencing the online heat map: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
I've considered it. Interested to know how the data are labelled - e.g. could you filter by season, activity type, year? This paper found a relationship between heatmap intensity and brown bear usage, by screen-grabbing and georeferencing the online heat map: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
OTOH, why would we reject something with the potential to reduce global temperature by 0.7-1.2C? Or, what if you divided "emissions reductions" into its constituent interventions - each would have a small potential on its own. Don't we need everything?
September 4, 2025 at 11:23 AM
OTOH, why would we reject something with the potential to reduce global temperature by 0.7-1.2C? Or, what if you divided "emissions reductions" into its constituent interventions - each would have a small potential on its own. Don't we need everything?