Brazil's Carbon Balance: How Rain and Trees Fight Climate Change

Mon Dec 09 2024
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You might think that all greenhouse gas emissions come from factories and cars, right? Not in Brazil! Here, the biggest source is actually farms and forests. That's because trees and plants can soak up carbon dioxide, making them natural air filters. We wanted to see how this affects Brazil's carbon balance. So, we looked at two sets of numbers: Climate TRACE and SEEG. These are like reports that track greenhouse gas emissions and how much carbon is taken in by ecosystems. We checked how rain and photosynthesis – the process plants use to make food – affect these numbers.
Guess what? The two reports didn't always match up. Sometimes, they differed by a whopping 1 billion tons of CO2! This was mainly because of how they counted carbon from forests. But here's something interesting: in some regions like Caatinga, rain and photosynthesis were going up between 2015 and 2022. This meant that these ecosystems could suck in more carbon. In fact, by 2022, Caatinga alone was taking in almost half of Brazil's total carbon removal! If we could stop cutting down forests and messing with these ecosystems, Brazil could really help clean up our planet's air. But there's a catch: understanding how carbon removal works isn't easy. Some reports capture changes better than others, showing that we still have a lot to learn.
https://localnews.ai/article/brazils-carbon-balance-how-rain-and-trees-fight-climate-change-acb92986

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