• @woelkchen
    link
    English
    51 year ago

    done in addition to direct carbon capture

    Plants are direct carbon capture.

    • zkfcfbzr
      link
      English
      01 year ago

      Uh huh. They also decay and release their carbon back into the atmosphere.

      • @woelkchen
        link
        English
        41 year ago

        Uh huh. They also decay and release their carbon back into the atmosphere.

        Not if the dead wood gets into anaerobic environment such as sinking to the bottom of swamps. And I don’t know if you’ve heard of it but wood is also a great building material. So you can literally take the wood, build something and afterwards just not incarcerate it but instead store old wood in artificial anaerobic environments.

        • zkfcfbzr
          link
          English
          11 year ago

          I’m not going to sit here pretending “We can sequester enough carbon from the atmosphere to make a difference globally by building with wood and sinking trees into swamps” is a good faith argument.

          • @woelkchen
            link
            English
            5
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            Keep shilling for fossil Big Oil then.

            To quote another commentator: “Unless your grid is running on 100% renewables and has excess capacity carbon capture causes net positive emissions.”

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            4
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            Stopping deforestation and creating new forests is absolutely a way to sequester carbon.

            Considering that trees can live for hundreds of years, it would be beneficial short term, even if at one point a tree dies and release carbon.

            And when a tree dies, other new trees can take its place and sequester the carbon the dead tree releases.

            • zkfcfbzr
              link
              English
              21 year ago

              For sure it is, and I noted it as one of many steps that needs to be taken earlier in this comment chain. Not to mention that doing this is a no-brainer even without the context of climate change. The problem with relying on them as your only strategy for carbon sequestration is that once the forests are mature, they start being basically carbon neutral - we need to pull out way more than even full reforestation could ever hope to do.

              Farming trees could even work for large scale long term carbon capture, if you do something like turn them into coal and re-fill and re-seal old mines with it in mass. I suspect we’ll be able to do much better with technological solutions though.