- Share
Geological Net Zero and the need for disaggregated accounting for carbon sinks
Climate change | Nature and the biosphere
Published: 18 November 2024
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
27-11-2024 to 27-11-2025
Available on-demand until 27th November 2025
Cost
Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Achieving net zero global emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2), with declining emissions of other greenhouse gases, is widely expected to halt global warming. CO2 emissions will continue to drive warming until fully balanced by active anthropogenic CO2 removals. For practical reasons, however, many greenhouse gas accounting systems allow some “passive” CO2 uptake, such as enhanced vegetation growth due to CO2 fertilisation, to be included as removals in the definition of net anthropogenic emissions. By including passive CO2 uptake, nominal net zero emissions would not halt global warming, undermining the Paris Agreement. Here we discuss measures addressing this problem, to ensure residual fossil fuel use does not cause further global warming: land management categories should be disaggregated in emissions reporting and targets to better separate the role of passive CO2 uptake; where possible, claimed removals should be additional to passive uptake; and targets should acknowledge the need for Geological Net Zero, meaning one tonne of CO2 permanently restored to the solid Earth for every tonne still generated from fossil sources. We also argue that scientific understanding of net zero provides a basis for allocating responsibility for the protection of passive carbon sinks during and after the transition to Geological Net Zero.
Contact details
Email address
Telephone number
0207 8334000

Springer Healthcare Ltd
The Campus
4 Crinan Street
London
N1 9XW