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by rgmerk 1015 days ago
The short answer is "no".

Carbon offset schemes that involve planting trees or, even worse, not chopping down trees, are notorious for the additionality problem. Much of the time, the payments are made to plant trees that would have been planted anyway.

The second problem that these schemes have is accurate measurement. This is particularly the case for "soil carbon" rather than forestry, but it's still true for forestry. All the incentives are to overestimate the amount of CO2 sequestered.

The third problem these schemes have is permanence on geological timescales. Let's say you buy land to regrow rainforest in a developing country. Then there's a coup and the new government decides that a quick buck flogging off the timber is more important than contracts signed under the old legal system?

1 comments

Well, at least forests are good for biodiversity, whereas CO2 removal technologies are just completely useless (except for the techno-solutionist cult).