Submitted by Wagamaga t3_11e576o in technology
judokid78 t1_jae8685 wrote
Reply to comment by SILENTSAM69 in Britain breaks 'green grid' record with latest 100 per cent clean power milestone by Wagamaga
Well trees do sequester CO2; all be it momentarily until they decompose. But that can be like a couple of hundred years depending on the tree and the environment it grows in.
While burning biomass is at best carbon neutral, shipping it around the world is probably the worst way to do it. The shipping and transportation industry is the largest source of CO2 emissions. Adding to that industry in the name of green energy is misleading at best. Burning locally sourced biomass like some farms do is much better.
Lastly virgin old-growth forests are our best carbon sinks; trees sequestering CO2. Cutting virgin trees to burn as fuel releases previously stored carbon as well as hindering that virgin forest's ability to store carbon.
Yellow_Snow_Cones t1_jaejkc1 wrote
>Lastly virgin old-growth forests are our best carbon sinks
I thought it was the algae in the ocean that does the most scrubbing. Which isn't always good since it makes the ocean more acidic and it messed with shell fish's shells.
judokid78 t1_jaetvaw wrote
Ok maybe not best. I think you're right about algae doing more scrubbing than our boreal forests.
But I will have to check on the acid thing. As far as I know atmospheric CO2 levels contribute more to ocean acidification.
SILENTSAM69 t1_jae9zba wrote
I hate calling it green as it still causes general air pollution. Shipping it is a huge problem. Better to just use the other carbon free sources of energy like renewables, hydro, nuclear, or geothermal, than to burn biomass.
Technically no living organism is a sequestration. Maybe for a human time scale it is, but not the environmental time scale. We could be growing vegetation and treating it as nuclear waste. The best form of long storage being large heavy lawn dart style containers dropped into the north Pacific. Sadly people don't do that with nuclear waste because of public ignorance and the stigma against putting waste in the ocean.
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