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by dcolkitt
2488 days ago
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Some back of the envelope math... One tree in a tropical rainforest sequesters 50 pounds of carbon. The Amazon contains 390 billion trees. Since industrialization humanity has cumulative released about a trillion tons of carbon. So if the entire Amazon burned down it would increase atmospheric carbon by less than 1%. This is just a rough estimate, and I'd encourage others to check my calculations. But intuitively this seems correct. Extracting fossil fuels releases all the carbon sequestered by organisms over 100 million+ years. Burning down a rainforest only releases the carbon sequestered by organisms currently living. I don't see how it wouldn't be possible for fossil fuels not to contain orders of magnitude more carbon than forests. Which is of course why the switch from wood to coal precipitated the industrial revolution. [1] https://medcraveonline.com/FREIJ/FREIJ-02-00040.pdf
[2] http://mentalfloss.com/article/63519/how-many-trees-are-ther...
[3] https://ourworldindata.org/co2-and-other-greenhouse-gas-emis... |
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However, I do believe just multiplying trees by weight does not accurately describe what carbon sequestration is. Trees are not the only place carbon is sequestered in a forest. Soil sediment, animals, and other plants also sequester. It’s also a home of biodiversity and nutrient run off that assists other parts of our global ecosystem. In turn, Carbon sequestration occurs over time; and it’s these rich, biodiverse ecosystems that produce the fossil fuels that we are burning, without them the carbon would never sink into the earth as it does.
Eliminating the rainforest halts the engine that cleans the atmosphere and removes the carbon and cools the earth. It would also dump millions of more tones into the atmosphere (even by your calculations). It would also disrupt global food chains which do produce our global breathable oxygen.
I’m not sure what your point is that you are making other than you imply that we don’t need to save the tropics because fossil fuels are worse; but I heartedly disagree with that implication.