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CoP-8/UNFCCC   SPECIAL EDITION  3

October 28, 2002


Stop press!
Sinks are a mistake, reports the New Scientist

Sinks in the Kyoto Protocol are based on a scientific fallacy, according to the first results of CarboEurope, a Europe-wide research programme. New Scientist reports that according to new results, the soil in ‘Kyoto forests’ will actually release more carbon than the growing trees absorb in the first 10 years. This is because forest soils and the organic matter buried in them typically contain three to four times as much carbon as the vegetation above. CarboEurope’s researchers have discovered that when ground is cleared for forest planting, rotting organic

matter in the soil releases a surge of carbon dioxide into the air. This release will exceed the carbon dioxide absorbed by growing trees for at least the first 10 years. Only later will the uptake of carbon by the trees begin to offset the losses from soils. In fact, some new forests planted on wet, peaty soils will never absorb as much carbon as they spit out. Europe’s forests are absorbing up to 400 million tonnes a year, or 30 per cent of the continent’s emissions.

DANGER
If the Kyoto Protocol doesn’t come into force soon enough, we are in for unpleasant consequences, warns a study published in Science. The world has little time: aggressive reductions of GHG emissions must begin very soon after 2012 in order to stabilise concentrations at 450 ppm.

It is possible to stabilise concentrations at 450 ppm if industrialised nations meet the Kyoto targets. In that case, global total emissions peak between 2010 and 2020, while global total emissions decline 1-3 per cent each year from 2020 to 2040. If they delay until 2020, global total emissions would need to decline 2-8 per cent yearly to stabilise concentrations at 450 ppm. Cripplingly prohibitive.

The results also reveal that old forests actually accumulate more carbon than young plantations. This suggests that conservation of old forests is a better policy for tackling global warming than planting new ones.

But the Kyoto Protocol takes none of this into account. "Besides ignoring soils, it has no measures to stop deforestation," says Riccardo Valentini of the University of Tuscia in Vitervo, Italy. Instead, it seems to give countries a perverse incentive to chop down existing natural forests and replace them with plantations.

"They will be able to claim carbon credits for the new planting, while in reality releasing huge amounts of carbon dioxide into the air," says Valentini. "There is nothing in the protocol to stop this." "If the politicians had known in 1997 what we know now, they would never have agreed to its rules on carbon sinks –– at least, I hope they wouldn’t," says CarboEurope chairman Han Dolman.

 

 

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