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Desert greening could slow climate change

Source: ScienceNOW

16 September 2009 | EN

a Eucalyptus tree

A Eucalyptus tree

FAO

Researchers say they have found a way to 'green' the Sahara desert with swathes of trees — and put the brakes on climate change at the same time.

Leonard Ornstein, a cell biologist from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in the United States, and NASA climate modellers David Rind and Igor Aleinov, say that water from the desert's neighbouring oceans could be desalinated and transported inland with pumps and aqueducts.

Heat-tolerant, fast-growing species such as eucalyptus could be planted, with drip irrigation — using plastic tubing to deliver water to roots — to minimise evaporation.

Such forests could cool the Sahara by up to eight degrees Celsius and return rain to the region, they say. Clouds would also help to reflect the sun's rays.  The fast-growing trees could absorb eight billion tonnes of carbon dioxide per year — the amount emitted from burning fossil fuels and forests today — and could do so for decades.

The price tag of US$2 trillion a year is not low. But Ornstein and colleagues say that after several decades the forests would provide a sustainable source of firewood, making them carbon neutral.

Drawbacks of the increased moisture are the possibility of more locust plagues and the prevention of iron-rich dust blowing into the Atlantic Ocean where it feeds sea life, the researchers say.

Nevertheless, the idea "is incredibly important and definitely worth taking seriously," says atmospheric scientist Richard Anthes, president of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research.

The model will be published in Climatic Change next month.

Comments

Yoseph Assefa Woldeamanuel ( Addis Ababa University | Ethiopia )

21 September 2009

The idea looks sound. the cost benefit analysis may need further consideration Yoseph Assefa, ETFF (www.etff.org)

Alan Page ( United States of America )

21 September 2009

In discussing this kind of reclamation of arid sites, it was mentioned that the use of moistened biochar and compost placed in holes dug before planting had better results than the planting regime described. The biochar must be appropriately treated to load it with nutrients and a local microbial population. Microbial action on new char will enhance the water adsorption and water holding capacity significantly.

Jorge laine ( Venezuela )

22 September 2009

I suppose that solar energy is the most appropriate source of energy for desalination of sea water for carrying afforestation of Sahara or other dessert areas (for each square meter of solar collector up to 60 cubic meter of sea water can be desalinated yearly). But water is not the unique requirement, soils requires also some organic carbon. Biochar (also referred as agrichar) application may be the solution, but this will require enormous amount of biomass to be pyrolyzed. Another possibility has been recently proposed (http://www.caer.uky.edu/energeia/PDF/vol20_2.pdf) consisting in the use of fossil hydrocarbon coke as starting material for agrichar, particularly in Middle East and North Africa countries where some of their petroleum could be used for producing such agrichars coke.

Jürgen Metzger ( Germany )

28 September 2009

Mankind has been degrading in historical times some billion hectares of areas originally forested and covered with vegetation,respectively.Afforestation of degraded areas is the greatest challenge on the way to a sustainable development. Without afforestation, the desertification will further progress transforming more and more of the areas prone to desertification into new deserts. Afforestation methods and techniques are available, however, have to be improved and developed. see Jürgen O. Metzger, Aloys Hüttermann, Sustainable global energy supply based on lignocellulosic biomass from afforestation of degraded areas, Naturwissenschaften (2009) 96:279–288. Download:http://www.metzger.chemie.uni-oldenburg.de/publikationen/pdf/122.pdf Jurgen O. Metzger (Germany)

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