mistermack wrote:nellikin wrote:
I believe the solution to the elevated levels of GHGs in the atmosphere lies in changing our land-use and management practices (as well as immediately changing our lifestyles to reduce current emissions!)
You say you're not advocating doing nothing, but let's face facts. If you are advocating something that has no chance of happening, then there is really very little difference. You might just as well advise doing nothing.
Actually, farmers around the world are currently changing their land-management practices - the rise of low/ no-till farming is documented around the world.
mistermack wrote:nellikin wrote:
If we increased the amount of carbon stored in soils world-wide by 15%, this would be the equivalent of offsetting ALL of the GHGs emitted since the onset of the industrial revolution!
How come it's all right for soil, but crazy for water? There seems to be a double standard there.
Won't the soil bacteria send it back to the atmosphere? (it's not an idea I've come across, so I don't know the mechanics of it).
What would it do to the rivers and lakes, and estuaries and shallow seas?
I'm sure there are good answers, or you wouldn't be PHDing it. But I don't see it being actively promoted by the global warming nuts.
Maybe you should read the agriculture section of the IPCC reports. They have been advocating soil carbon sequestration as a short-term solution for elevated GHGs for years. When the Liberal Party in Australia announced its climate change policy at the start of the last year, the measure they suggested was soil carbon sequestration - because it's good for soils and good for the atmosphere (as opposed to being bad for the ocean and good for the atmosphere in the case of carbon sequestration in the ocean...) So no double standards, merely an in depth understanding of ecosystems and soil here. And yes, the problem is the long-term storage of organic carbon in soils, but several mechanisms have been identified which offer this and are currently being investigated (amongst other things, by me).
nellikin wrote:
We don't know how the oceans will react to increased levels of dissolved inorganic carbon (or DOC for that matter) and I would strongly advocate against testing the waters, just in the hope it may help
I would absolutely disagree with that. And with the general argument that this is some kind of leap into the unknown.
As I mentioned earlier, the idea is to mimic the natural upwellings of nutrients that happen in many places around the world, where ocean currents meet steeply rising continental shelfs.
We have LOADS of examples to look at, and the result is invariably good. You get a fabulous proliferation of life, all the way up the food chain, and seas where green algae fix dissolved carbon from the ocean, and give off oxygen.
The world would be in big trouble WITHOUT these natural upwellings.[/quote]
I'm not saying that this is necessarily wrong, merely that in depth understanding of the natural ecosystem of the deep ocean (and ocean in general) is important before launching a project like this. The deep ocean ecosystems are barely understood - sampling is a huge issue here, and the associated costs - so that that would be required (and probably take decades to complete) before alunching something like this. This isn't time we really have, so the idea seems to be not really viable to me.
If you are truly interested in soil carcon, why not google it. Or here's a link for you
http://www.soilcarbon.com.au/index.html
As I said - getting carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere into soils (where it is stored as soil organic matter) is good for soils and the atmosphere - so highly desirable. It increases soil fertility and productivity, so helps to solve issues regarding adequate food production! If we want to help the humans and our environment, conserving our soils should be one of our top priorities.
To ignore the absence of evidence is the base of true faith.
-Gore Vidal