Atlantica - 01.05.2007, Side 25

Atlantica - 01.05.2007, Side 25
GOING GREEN? Debunking the myths about o setting your carbon emissions. Barely an hour goes by these days without the buzzphrase ‘climate change’ making the head_ lines. Extreme weather, rising global temperatures and even extinctions and epidemics are all blamed on our addiction to fossil fuels. But there’s hope. Carbon offsetting basically means trying to reduce the net carbon emissions released into the atmosphere through proxies responsible for investing in renewable energy. In other words, you give back what you take. The most common way of doing this is by planting trees. But the most common way of making this happen is actually not to head out yourself and start digging holes for your saplings – but rather to pay somebody else to plant the trees for you. There are a growing number of companies all over the world providing carbon offsetting services to the general public and businesses alike. Many of them operate their own forestry schemes, whereby they plant and manage the trees to effect the greatest sustained carbon dioxide uptake possible. Unfortunately, good things are never quite that simple. Carbon offsetting has its doubters in the business community, and also in the environ_ mentalists’ camp. You see, trees simply aren’t a magic cure for climate change. Their biggest drawback is that all the carbon dioxide absorbed into their flesh (through the process of photosynthesis) is released back into the atmosphere after they die. At best, that makes trees a global warming delay rather than a cure. On the other hand, if old trees are replaced with new ones, the process at least becomes carbon neutral because the new trees reabsorb the old trees’ carbon. To add to this, if the old trees are burned for fuel, they might save on the burning of oil, coal or gas – and that, of course, is a good thing. But what if even the first generation of trees planted for carbon offsetting actually exacerbated global warming? Shockingly, that just might be the case. Not only do trees absorb carbon dioxide, their dark leaves also absorb and trap the sun’s heat, thereby increasing global warming. Scientists at California’s Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have calculated that trees planted in the tropics are able to grow quickly and that the water evaporating from their leaves helps to create clouds, thus cooling the earth. Therefore forestation ILLUSTRATION BY LILJA GUNNARSDÓTTIR on the fly BY ALËX ELLIOTT
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Atlantica

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