this post was submitted on 22 Oct 2023
481 points (94.3% liked)
Green - An environmentalist community
5308 readers
1 users here now
This is the place to discuss environmentalism, preservation, direct action and anything related to it!
RULES:
1- Remember the human
2- Link posts should come from a reputable source
3- All opinions are allowed but discussion must be in good faith
Related communities:
- /c/collapse
- /c/antreefa
- /c/gardening
- /c/[email protected]
- /c/biology
- /c/criseciv
- /c/eco
- /c/[email protected]
- SLRPNK
Unofficial Chat rooms:
founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Yeah, if every single trend occurring today continues linearly into the future and we don't account for the fact that all of the methane emissions have to be offset by carbon sinks from plant growth, we'll have a problem.
Fortunately none of that will happen. Your study is literally assuming that we will stop using all carbon within 20 years, but yet continue to use it for nitrogen fixation.
If you go look at their graphs, you notice a trend. The lines comparing fossil fuels and food emissions don't diverge until the absurd linear assumptions they make go nuts 50 years into the future.
At the end of the day, if you remove the fossil fuel usage, the cycle must self-balance, else eventually you run out of some resource.
That is one option, you can reduce methane emissions through things like medication.
You can gather the cows into one big airtight building, collect the methane emissions, and burn it before it gets into the atmosphere instead of just venting it raw into the atmosphere.
And you can do the same thing for manure.
Right now we aren't doing anything because these really aren't the problems we need to solve right now. The vast vast majority of emissions today are coming from:
Transportation.
Manufacturing.
Electricity use.
Agriculture is ten percent. Land carbon sinks in the United States? They offset 12 percent.
That is completely misunderstanding the study. The study still finds that food emissions alone - with zero emissions from non-food sources after 2020 - would make us miss climate targets.. They do other analysis later than only makes the picture worse if other emissions aren't immediately stopped
For biogas, it still has plenty of methane emissions and doesn't solve a number of other environmental issues like waterway pollution
What "medication" are you referring to with cattle? That's pretty vague but most likely you are referring to some kind of feed addatives which have the problems I mentioned earlier
Did you actually read past the abstract?
Literally everything I said in my comment above still applies and you responded to literally none of it.
The line I quoted in the second response was not from the abstract