![]() |
||
|
|
||
|
April
9, 2007 How effective are
new trees in
offsetting the carbon footprint? A new study suggests that the location
of the
new trees is an important factor when considering such carbon offset
projects.
Planting and preserving forests in the tropics is more likely to slow
down
global warming. But the study
concludes that
planting new trees in certain parts of the planet may actually warm the
Earth. The new study, which
combines
climate and carbon-cycle effects of large-scale deforestation in a
fully
interactive three-dimensional climate-carbon model, confirms that
planting more
tropical rainforests could help slow global warming worldwide. The research, led by
Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory atmospheric scientist Govindasamy Bala,
appears
in the April 9-13 online edition of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences. According to the
study, new
forests in mid- to high-latitude locations could actually create a net
warming.
Specifically, more trees in mid-latitude locations like the Forests affect
climate in three
different ways: they absorb the greenhouse gas – carbon
dioxide – from the
atmosphere and help keep the planet cool; they evaporate water to the
atmosphere and increase cloudiness, which also helps keep the planet
cool; and
they are dark and absorb sunlight (the albedo effect), warming the
Earth.
Previous climate change mitigation strategies that promote planting
trees have
taken only the first effect into account. "Our study shows
that only
tropical rainforests are strongly beneficial in helping slow down
global
warming," Bala said. "It is a win-win situation in the tropics
because trees in the tropics, in addition to absorbing carbon dioxide,
promote
convective clouds that help to cool the planet. In other locations, the
warming
from the albedo effect either cancels or exceeds the net cooling from
the other
two effects." Other researchers
from the
Carnegie Institution, Stanford and Université Montpellier
II, France also
contributed to the report. The study concludes
that by the year
2100, forests in mid- and high-latitudes will make some places up to 10
degrees
Fahrenheit warmer than would have occurred if the forests did not
exist. The authors caution
that the
cooling from deforestation outside the tropics should not be viewed as
a
strategy for mitigating climate change. "Preservation of ecosystems is
a
primary goal of preventing global warming, and the destruction of
ecosystems to
prevent global warming would be a counterproductive and perverse
strategy," said Ken Caldeira, from the Carnegie Institution and a
co-author of this report. "Apart from their
role in
altering the planet's climate, forests are valuable in many other
aspects," Bala said. "Forests provide natural habitat to plants and
animals, preserve the biodiversity, produce economically valuable
timber and
firewood, protect watersheds and indirectly prevent ocean
acidification. "In planning
responses to
global challenges, it is important to pursue broad goals and avoid
narrow
criteria that may lead to environmentally harmful consequences,"
Caldeira
said.
http://www.llnl.gov/ Recommend this Article to a Friend Back to: News |
|
Subscribe to the Earth Observatory About the Earth Observatory Contact Us Privacy Policy and Important Notices Responsible NASA Official: Lorraine A. Remer Webmaster: Goran Halusa We're a part of the Science Mission Directorate |