Atmos. Chem. Phys., 16, 3761–3812, 2016
www.atmos-chem-phys.net/16/3761/2016/
doi:10.5194/acp-16-3761-2016
© Author(s) 2016. CC Attribution 3.0 License.
Ice melt, sea level rise and superstorms: evidence from paleoclimate data, climate modeling, and modern observations that 2 ◦C global warming could be dangerous
James Hansen1, Makiko Sato1, Paul Hearty2, Reto Ruedy3,4, Maxwell Kelley3,4, Valerie Masson-Delmotte5,
Gary Russell4, George Tselioudis4, Junji Cao6, Eric Rignot7,8, Isabella Velicogna7,8, Blair Tormey9, Bailey Donovan10,
Evgeniya Kandiano11, Karina von Schuckmann12, Pushker Kharecha1,4, Allegra N. Legrande4, Michael Bauer4,13,
and Kwok-Wai Lo3,4
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On Mar 24, 2016, at 9:35 AM, James Hansen <jimeh...@gmail.com> wrote:Thanks for this. In my talks I always note that "improved agricultural and forestry practices", as well as rapid phasedown of fossil fuel emissions, will be essential to restore the planet's energy balance. At most I can make a few superficial comments on the topic (including the fact that my oldest grandchild and I applied 1 ton of biochar on our property). I will try to understand the topic a little better when I write my next book.Jim Hansen
(from/de Soil Carbon Coalition)
As Vernadsky realized about 100 years ago, life (powered by photosynthesis and carbon cycling) is the most potent geologic force. Carbon cycling (which heavily influences water cycling) underlies almost all of our biggest challenges. Many now realize that humans have become a principle influence on carbon and water cycling, but our influence has been largely inadvertent, and often (e.g. changes in soil carbon in specific places) outside our awareness.
Comme l’a découvert Vernadsky il y a approximativement un siècle, la vie (générée par la photosynthèse et le cycle du carbone) est la plus puissante des forces géologiques. Le cycle du carbone (qui influence fortement le cycle de l’eau) est la principale force derrière tous nos plus importants défis. Plusieurs réalisent aujourd’hui que l’humanité est devenue la principale influence sur les cycles du carbone et de l’eau, mais notre influence s’est produite largement par inadvertance, et souvent (e.g. la diminution des niveaux de carbone des sols) en dehors de notre connaissance.
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On Mar 24, 2016, at 11:31 AM, al...@greendiamondsystems.com [biochar] <bio...@yahoogroups.com> wrote:Erich,Two observations:I saw no mention of biochar (charcoal suitable for horticultural use) as a carbon negative addition. I know that there are vineyards in France that are using biochar and this is even more stable than the soil stored labile carbon and the volume that could be added is significantly greater than the annual uptake by plants if it became acknowledged that this was relevant to humanity.Second, it would be interesting how the French are financing this proactive practice other than paying more for food? We still seem to have missed the concept that central banks make liquidity out of thin air, and value can only be bestowed on something if there is life. So if it is important for there to be life there should be no problem in generating the liquidity to get the practice to happen - especially if it is ameliorative, permanent (in the short run -100s of years to 10s of thousands of years), over time will enhance the maintenance of life with more food and fiber.We need to be talking to the right people in the right way. If those folks are convinced that most of humanity is less important than they are then we need to know this and act accordingly.Alan C. Page, Ph.D., Research Forester - MA License #184
Green Diamond Systems
125 Blue Meadow Road
Belchertown, MA 01007
Phone: 413-323-4401
Cell: 413-883-9642
From: "Erich Knight erichj...@gmail.com [biochar]" <bio...@yahoogroups.com>
To: Soil Age <soil...@googlegroups.com>; biochar <bio...@yahoogroups.com>; "se-bi...@googlegroups.com" <se-bi...@googlegroups.com>
Cc: James Hansen <jimeh...@gmail.com>; James Hansen <je...@columbia.edu>; "la...@osu.edu" <la...@osu.edu>; Paul Hepperly <Paul.H...@gmail.com>; kristine...@rodaleinstitute.org; Timothy LaSalle <tim.l...@gmail.com>; E Philip Small <psmal...@landprofile.com>; ag...@usda.gov; "steven...@ars.usda.gov" <steven...@ars.usda.gov>; Jim Titus <titu...@epa.gov>; "ewi...@oeb.harvard.edu" <ewi...@oeb.harvard.edu>; David Fork <fo...@google.com>
Sent: Thursday, March 24, 2016 2:25 AM
Subject: [biochar] Re: [soil-age] New Hansen paper on Ice melting impacts makes important points
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Thank you Ron,
I don’t think anyone says James should do more. lol
But with the scientific facts, and the needed warnings to the world, there is no doubts solutions — all of them win-win-win — have to be presented with a better pitch, to a wider audience. That is a challenge for all of us, from all venues.
In the field of renewable energies and energy efficiency, the Worldwatch Institute and Lester Brown have been doing a great job at announcing better days, for decades. They certainly did better predictions on renewables than the IEA… Today people like Elon Mush and Jigar Shah do the same from an industry, and a financial view point. There is no doubt in my mind that renewables will take over fossil fuel rapidly. Today in many countries, most new electricity today come from wind, solar, and biomass.
Yet it is clear that soils are central to the carbon cycle, and we will not drawdown GtC from the atmosphere and oceans with renewables. We need to reinvent agriculture and land use in general, to feed humanity, fight global warming, reduce pollutions, mitigate erosion/eutrophisation/water shortages and floods. A very good documentary « INHABIT - a Permaculture Perspective » I bought on Vimeo, does a great job at sending this badly needed positive message.
Now, I have been reading big books as Biochar for environmental management, Geotherapy, and currently Carbon farming by Eric Toensmeier. I have listen to hundreds of hours of video on no-till/cover crop, holistic grazing management, permaculture, soil life-web, history of soil degradations by geomorphologist David Montgomery, etc. I refer to those books and experts in my blog that I just renamed Geotherapy Chronicle (hope you don’t mind).
What I see seldom are people that can tell us, with a certain confidence, how we are going to be carbon negative, and how much it will cost. How do you sequester 400 GtC? That is the million dollar question. With you Ron we estimated on this site last year 2-4 billion per ppm, using biochar only. I think this number holds. That would be 1000 billion to get back to normal (300-350 ppm)… cause emissions will obviously not stop tomorrow. A trillion or 1.5% of world economy during one year, not as much as it sounds. In fact the best investment ever…
But what if we mix biochar with compost? What if we use some rock dust, and push permaculture? What if, with biochar, we encourage home-gardens systems, agro-sylvo-pasture, agroforestry and perennial crops, agroecology strategies? What if we do it in regions that have bare, infertile soils, as in Northern Africa? What if we bring in new soil expertise from the soil health / soil-life web experts, or mycorrhizal fungi of Prof André Fortin that has grown forests on rocky sides of dams in Northern Québec… And what about bringing back animals that co-evolved with soils for thousands of years, sometimes creating humus 200 feet deep?
The part that often stays in the air (if I might say) is the stability of carbon versus labile carbon. Biochar appears as the most stable, but more data and research would be welcome. Mind you the terra preta is arguably the longest agriculture experience ever produced. I increasingly believe a land/soil-based, multistrada, multipurpose biological revolution is needed. It could put us on the path to restoration and regeneration, and, by the same token, allow nations to start controlling the carbon cycle.
Best regards,
Benoit
(from/de Soil Carbon Coalition)
As Vernadsky realized about 100 years ago, life (powered by photosynthesis and carbon cycling) is the most potent geologic force. Carbon cycling (which heavily influences water cycling) underlies almost all of our biggest challenges. Many now realize that humans have become a principle influence on carbon and water cycling, but our influence has been largely inadvertent, and often (e.g. changes in soil carbon in specific places) outside our awareness.
Comme l’a découvert Vernadsky il y a approximativement un siècle, la vie (générée par la photosynthèse et le cycle du carbone) est la plus puissante des forces géologiques. Le cycle du carbone (qui influence fortement le cycle de l’eau) est la principale force derrière tous nos plus importants défis. Plusieurs réalisent aujourd’hui que l’humanité est devenue la principale influence sur les cycles du carbone et de l’eau, mais notre influence s’est produite largement par inadvertance, et souvent (e.g. la diminution des niveaux de carbone des sols) en dehors de notre connaissance.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/soil-age/417D191E-77F7-4E2C-8A33-460AC3CFECC6%40comcast.net.
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I see a lack of precision regarding stable carbon and labile carbone potentially coming from big biomass generations around the world.
Biomass in tropical regions can be huge, but how much soil organic matter will transform into humus and stable carbon, into a permanent sink? Obviously Amazonians did not have that in mind, but they sequestered, for good, a few GtC I suppose producing terra preta. It obviously depends on species too and their roots -- in the tropics they tend to go side way, no?
Most of the climate crisis comes from fossil fuels and the carbon from tilling 10’000 years. David Montgomery did his PhD about the impact on erosion of deforestation in the Pacific Northwest. To his surprise, and a bit contrary to what many think, he fund out it was mainly ploughing from agriculture that was the source of erosion, not deforestation per se. The reason is that trees grow back, even without reforestation — obviously not meaning there is no other problems associated with clear cutting. In the Amazon the Spaniards did not find the roads described by Orellana, only 70 years after...
While with restorative agriculture we can put back a lot of soil organic matter, humus and carbon thanks to root exudates — and even green some desserts or semi-arid areas (see John Liu and the Loess Plateau) — I wonder how much will have to be pyrolysed into biochar to accelerate the sequestration process?
Anyone with clarifications on that? I would appreciate.
Best, Benoit
(from/de Soil Carbon Coalition)
As Vernadsky realized about 100 years ago, life (powered by photosynthesis and carbon cycling) is the most potent geologic force. Carbon cycling (which heavily influences water cycling) underlies almost all of our biggest challenges. Many now realize that humans have become a principle influence on carbon and water cycling, but our influence has been largely inadvertent, and often (e.g. changes in soil carbon in specific places) outside our awareness.
Comme l’a découvert Vernadsky il y a approximativement un siècle, la vie (générée par la photosynthèse et le cycle du carbone) est la plus puissante des forces géologiques. Le cycle du carbone (qui influence fortement le cycle de l’eau) est la principale force derrière tous nos plus importants défis. Plusieurs réalisent aujourd’hui que l’humanité est devenue la principale influence sur les cycles du carbone et de l’eau, mais notre influence s’est produite largement par inadvertance, et souvent (e.g. la diminution des niveaux de carbone des sols) en dehors de notre connaissance.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/soil-age/2BAC83A0-F744-4FC1-BCF6-11B8C57F66DC%40bestweb.net.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/soil-age/CAEJ8%2BcrW14xYVjrmuOTz9%3DKb9kmjYT_iTUvYdiQ%2Br3N59PxH5Q%40mail.gmail.com.
(from/de Soil Carbon Coalition)
As Vernadsky realized about 100 years ago, life (powered by photosynthesis and carbon cycling) is the most potent geologic force. Carbon cycling (which heavily influences water cycling) underlies almost all of our biggest challenges. Many now realize that humans have become a principle influence on carbon and water cycling, but our influence has been largely inadvertent, and often (e.g. changes in soil carbon in specific places) outside our awareness.
Comme l’a découvert Vernadsky il y a approximativement un siècle, la vie (générée par la photosynthèse et le cycle du carbone) est la plus puissante des forces géologiques. Le cycle du carbone (qui influence fortement le cycle de l’eau) est la principale force derrière tous nos plus importants défis. Plusieurs réalisent aujourd’hui que l’humanité est devenue la principale influence sur les cycles du carbone et de l’eau, mais notre influence s’est produite largement par inadvertance, et souvent (e.g. la diminution des niveaux de carbone des sols) en dehors de notre connaissance.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/soil-age/27F8CFAB-5826-4332-AE4A-12BBE26A6F03%40bestweb.net.
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http://freespeechproductions.info/RABrochureMasterpages13
The Reluctant Activist.org
The government is not your friend. ~ The Minuteman
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Dear Denise,
With all respect, I think you are confusing money with politic. And frankly it is not a commodity as carbon, that will, by itself, solve the issues you are raising.
Money is not the problem, the capitalist system with no control, no inclusion of social and environmental needs, is the problem. Ask Bernie, he will tell you everything about it! Entrepreneurs can be intelligent, descent and well intentioned people (Elon Musk, Yvon Choinard, Jigar Shah). But it is to people to frame the economy, not a minority of entrepreneurs and business people, 3% of the population. I should underline that in recent years, in certain fields, the environment has done progress: recycling, protection of certain areas, animals are coming back all over Europe, FSC labelling, GMO interdiction in Europe, etc. But yes, it is far far from enough.
Now, you give me the chance to present again what this group has to convey in terms of message IMO. Reversing climate change is not a big cost, it is an investment, for better, more productive soils. And that investment is our of reach: it will be about 30 billion a year for the entire world, about what the solar industry represents today. It is, more or less, USD 1000 billions over 30 years… not the end of the world!
In financial terms, reversing climate change, considering all co-benefits, is a no brainer! Using well known tools to promote carbon farming (LULUCF) with green fiscality, leasing to farmers (with some governments guarantees), cap and trade (international or national), we could do so much in putting carbon back where it belongs, in soils. By the way, agriculture is already the most subsidized domain of the economy, for mostly bad reasons. What needs to be done is subsidize it for the good reasons, the budgets are not even to be fund!
Best, Ben
(from/de Soil Carbon Coalition)
As Vernadsky realized about 100 years ago, life (powered by photosynthesis and carbon cycling) is the most potent geologic force. Carbon cycling (which heavily influences water cycling) underlies almost all of our biggest challenges. Many now realize that humans have become a principle influence on carbon and water cycling, but our influence has been largely inadvertent, and often (e.g. changes in soil carbon in specific places) outside our awareness.
Comme l’a découvert Vernadsky il y a approximativement un siècle, la vie (générée par la photosynthèse et le cycle du carbone) est la plus puissante des forces géologiques. Le cycle du carbone (qui influence fortement le cycle de l’eau) est la principale force derrière tous nos plus importants défis. Plusieurs réalisent aujourd’hui que l’humanité est devenue la principale influence sur les cycles du carbone et de l’eau, mais notre influence s’est produite largement par inadvertance, et souvent (e.g. la diminution des niveaux de carbone des sols) en dehors de notre connaissance.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/soil-age/CADCsQZbNg%3DwkNayJOsBojUwe4ht1LsmCTRoX5KZE6txGdsLqpg%40mail.gmail.com.
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