Various methods of carbon dioxide removal (CDR) are being pursued in response to the climate crisis, but they are mostly not proven at scale. Climate experts are divided over whether CDR is a necessary requirement or a dangerous distraction from limiting emissions. In this Viewpoint, six experts offer their views on the CDR debate.
Trees. Plant trees. Keep studying other methods of CDR but plant trees. I’m sure most of these CDR things are just grant grabs to get money and appear to be helpful but they are all less efficient than just spending the money on planting trees.
Actually, do not plant every tree everywhere, because wrong trees at the wrong place might cause more emissions than regular succession.
I’m all for (re)planting forests, but for the purpose of biodiversity loss. It won’t put a dent in our carbon problem. It can’t…we’ve released millions of years of plant life carbon collection in a century. Which is why CDR is also a fallacy as a solution, it cannot scale to even balance out yearly emissions, much less what’s already in the air and oceans that’s driving all the problems we face.
Prediction - we as a global society won’t change until we’re forced to by necessity (probably scarcity of resources), and even then we’ll try and fight it with measures like geoengineering to keep doing things a little longer. As individuals we just have to do the best we can locally to prepare and adapt for a changing future, don’t expect help from the powers that be or some future tech that circumvents physics.
There will never be enough trees to absorb all the carbon emitted from fossil fuels.
There isn’t enough land to plant all the trees we need to capture all the carbon emissions.
Planting trees in the wrong biomes would degrade the biome and release stored carbon.