Gore: Deal on Emissions from Land Useage Change Critical
A global deal to cap surging emissions of carbon dioxide from soil will form a critical part of any successful agreement to tackle climate change in Copenhagen later this year, Al Gore said today.
The former US Vice President and environmental campaigner urged world leaders who are set to gather for a UN meeting in the Danish capital in December to recognise the critical importance of soil carbon: an often overlooked part of the debate on global warming.
"There is three times as much carbon in the first two meters of soil than there is in all of the world's vegetation," he told an environmental conference at the Smith School in Oxford.
Current estimates indicate that changing land use - including the burning of peatland, the conversion of degraded former forest land to agriculture and desertification through over-farming - is responsible for as much as 30 per cent of the world's carbon emissions, more than either deforestation, power generation or transport.
Mr Gore cited the example of Indonesia, the world's third largest emitter of carbon dioxide after China and the US.
He said Indonesia's high level of emissions were chiefly the result of soil degradation rather than the linked but distinct problem of deforestation.
"Brazil cuts down twice as many trees as Indonesia but Indonesia emits twice as much carbon dioxide as Brazil."
Much of Indonesia's tropical rainforest lies on peat soil. After the trees have been cut, the peat is often burnt before the land can be reused - mostly for the creation of palm oil plantations.
The practice releases vast amounts of carbon into the atmosphere and each burning season leaves plumes of smoke hanging over much of southeast Asia for months at a time.
The greenhouse effect is compounding the problem of soil degradation because rising temperatures add to the drying and destruction of carbon-rich soils.
Mr Gore said China was leading the way in trying to "recarbonise" degraded soil through tree planting - an effort which he said needed to intensify globally.
"China now plants two and a half times more trees than the rest of the world put together," he said.
"Every Chinese citizen between the ages of 6 and 60 has to plant three trees a year." Soil is the third-largest natural store of carbon in the world after the oceans and fossil fuels such as coal, oil and gas.
Mr Gore expressed optimism that the vast challenge of cutting emissions remained feasible.
"Time is short. Today we will put 70 million tonnes of carbon dioxide into the thin shell of the atmosphere surrounding the planet [but] there is no question that we can solve this crisis."
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6 Comments so far
Show AllA great adjunct technology that could accelerate tree growth is the "Vortex Ventilator" which would act as a large "artificial tree" to improve growing conditions (reduced temperature, increased humidity) over regions having newly planted forests. The ventilator could operate long enough, perhaps with decreasing intensity over time, until the trees are large enough, and the forest extensive enough, to create its own, sustainable, micro-climate.
Ref: http://vortexengine.ca
I see we have a couple of comments finding fault with Al Gore. I suppose these commenters are near perfect human beings. Well good for them. Perfection is grand. Sadly, I'm not perfect. I try to do the right thing quite often, but I know I sometimes could do far better. Anyway, 3 cheers for our 2 perfect humans, hip,hip...
Don't be so smug Greg R. Many people have problems with Mr. Gore's hypocrisy. If Gore had stood up for the environment as candidate for President in 2000, then perhaps the Bush Coup wouldn't have been possible because the election wouldn't have been close enough to steal.
Like many people I voted for Mr. Nader because he was willing to campaign on such issues.
Sorry if I come off as 'smug.' I think of myself as a realist.
When Mr. Gore starts walkin the walk instead of just talking the talk he will be worth listening to. Till then, he is just another loud mouth that has his own agenda.
Glad to hear Mr. Gore speaking up. Now when will he be ready to take on the mountain top removal coal mining right at home not far from his Tennessee base? But that would mean crossing swords with fellow Democrats and major US corporations, a task most of the two-branched/one party politicans avoid at all costs. Yes even at the cost of the global climate and environment, which Mr. Gore has proclaimed in book and film as a central concern. So can he walk the talk when it is right in his home political and living turf? That's the true test of real leadership. In his 90s, onetime West Virginia Congressman Ken Heckler was there to walk the talk at recent protests against the incredibly destructive mining? When will Gore show up?