The CO2 emissions are not themselves the point, the CO2 concentrations are. The concentration is neutral in time scales we care about from wood/alge/bioethanol/etc., but goes up from fossil fuels.
It’s also fine to burn fossil fuels if you can make long-term carbon sinks from other processes, hence people caring about making carbon-rich rocks or whether dead plankton floats our sinks.
It’s a question of being responsible for the consequences of actions, not outright banning those actions before the alternatives have been deployed at scale.
It’s also fine to burn fossil fuels if you can make long-term carbon sinks from other processes, hence people caring about making carbon-rich rocks or whether dead plankton floats our sinks.
It’s a question of being responsible for the consequences of actions, not outright banning those actions before the alternatives have been deployed at scale.