• Ben Matthews
    link
    fedilink
    English
    85 months ago

    And did they consult the mushrooms ? Seems in medium term, may help feed a lot of bugs and birds, which is good for biodiversity, but to store carbon, needs to be fungi-proof.

  • @ikidd
    link
    English
    65 months ago

    Good lord, what bullshit. On top of the fact that it’ll get broken down anyway, you’ll just burn a few tons of carbon excavating and filling a hole.

    • @gangdinesout
      link
      15 months ago

      There are several major problems this solves. The forests are overstocked, which is part of what leads to larger and more severe wildfire. These are live trees, and won’t break down, but need to be thinned. And if the forest does burn, that dead wood needs to be removed to prevent it from burning again. This wood could break down eventually, but it makes it riskier to replant (for both the people planting, and the new seedlings).

      Both of these activities are incredibly expensive, and burying the trees in a vault on site could provide a way to manage all of the wood, and pay for it.

      Should wood vaults be the only solution? Probably not. And we should definitely remain skeptical as they are proven out. But proper forest management is challenging, expensive, and is often neglected (at least in the US), and I think it’s overall beneficial to explore novel solutions like this.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    55 months ago

    They should be investing their energy into finding a way to make better use of these small logs instead of wasting them like this.

    • @Dearth
      link
      25 months ago

      How is this wasting the wood? The wood is directly available to insects and fungus once it’s buried

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      25 months ago

      Hopefully one where they are not burned or decomposed. Still, I think when applied to otherwise decomposing wood, the approach is interesting, as a transitional measure anyway.

  • @FrowingFostek
    link
    45 months ago

    100s or 1000s of years of store CO2? I’m not a soil engineer but, this sounds dubious to me.

      • @BradleyUffner
        link
        English
        3
        edit-2
        5 months ago

        Sink it in the deep ocean then, let’s see it burn there!!! Wait, what do you mean wood floats? Bah, details!

        • @FooBarrington
          link
          25 months ago

          You have to first carve the wood into wooden ducks. Since wood and ducks both float, this cancels out their buoyancy.

        • @Etterra
          link
          15 months ago

          Rocks are plentiful. Strap rocks to the logs.

  • @quinkin
    link
    15 months ago

    Seems like biochar would be a better solution.