Africa: Removing Carbon From Air Vital to Reach Climate Goals, IPCC Says

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Carbon dioxide removal “unavoidable” to achieve net zero goals
IPCC says forests, exotic tech needed alongside emissions cuts
Critics say too many risks from fledgling high-tech fixes
Extracting carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by planting forests and developing controversial high-tech industries will be essential to meet global goals to curb climate change, a U.N. report said on Monday.

The U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said the world could, in theory, halve emissions by 2030.

But it added that radical reductions in greenhouse gases would be insufficient to achieve the Paris Agreement targets to limit global warming.

In addition, it said, the world will need “carbon dioxide removal” (CDR) technologies – ranging from planting trees that soak up carbon to grow, to costly and energy-intensive technologies to suck carbon dioxide directly from the air.

“The deployment of CDR to counterbalance hard-to-abate residual emissions is unavoidable if net zero carbon dioxide or greenhouse gas emissions are to be achieved,” the IPCC said in a report on solutions to global warming, compiled by 278 authors.

The IPCC report also said CDR was an “essential element” in scenarios to limit warming to the Paris pact goals of well below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial times, while pursuing efforts to limit the rise to 1.5C.

Temperatures are already up about 1.1C, stoking more heatwaves, downpours, powerful storms and rising sea levels.

The IPCC warned that all the options for CDR have drawbacks, including even natural solutions such as planting more trees and managing soils and the oceans to soak up carbon.

Poorly managed, forest planting can take land from crops needed to feed an expanding world population.

Trees take years to grow and are also vulnerable to loggers, land clearance, pests, disease and a hotter climate that may threaten forests like the Amazon with more droughts and wildfires.

“Because CDR could come with new risks, getting CDR ready requires proper governance as well as innovation policy,” said Masahiro Sugiyama, an IPCC author at the University of Tokyo.

Nairobi-based Susan Chomba, of the World Resources Institute think-tank who was not among the IPCC authors, said there were still huge opportunities overall to protect and expand forests in Africa without harming food production.

“What I’m worried about is planting the wrong trees in the wrong places,” she said. Plantations of fast-growing eucalyptus trees introduced from Australia, for example, can drain wetlands with their high demand for water and threaten the habitats of African plants and animals.

The IPCC highlighted two main technological fixes.

BECCS – bioenergy from carbon capture and storage – is used by power plants and factories to capture and bury carbon emissions from burning or processing wood and other crops.

DACCS – direct air carbon dioxide capture and storage – meanwhile sucks carbon directly from the air.

But there is opposition by many environmentalists to such nascent technologies, who fear they will distract from the need for deep cuts in emissions, and will not work.

“We need to minimise our reliance on commercially unproven technologies, such as BECCS,” said Daniel Quiggin, a senior research fellow at the Chatham House think-tank in London.

He urged governments to focus on cutting demand for energy, in line with calls by European nations after Russia invaded Ukraine – by turning down thermostats, insulating homes better, and driving and flying less.

Other experts argued climate change is so severe that all technologies need to be studied.

“We really need everything,” said Jessica Strefler, a senior scientist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, who was not involved in the IPCC report.

“We need demand reductions, we need efficiency, we need emission reductions – and then we can offset the last 5-10%” through measures like forests or technological fixes, she said.

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