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Old Growth Forest, Oswald West State Park, Oregon. Photo by David Patte/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
David Patte/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
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Ecosystems capacity to store carbon in future depends on emissions reductions now

How much carbon is stored in natural systems of the continental western US?  Over coming decades, how much of the fossil fuel carbon dioxide we are pumping into the atmosphere will western ecosystems absorb? A new US Geological Service survey provides some sobering answers.

The two crucial takeways:

  • First, the capacity of western ecosystems to absorb carbon between now and 2050 depends on how rapidly we move now to reduce fossil emissions.  To put it simply, the hotter and drier we let the world become, the less will climate-stressed forests, grasslands and other systems be able to capture and store carbon.
  • Second, even healthy natural systems can each year absorb only a small fraction of our fossil emissions.  To have any hope we can restore a stable climate, we have to rapidly and dramatically reduce the amount of new CO2 we dump in the air each year.

The new study, Baseline and Projected Future Carbon Storage and Greenhouse-Gas Fluxes in Ecosystems of the Western United States, covers US lands and waters west of the continental divide.  It is part of a national carbon storage assessment ordered by Congress.  Thick with numbers, the report’s four-page executive summary provides a good overview.  Here are several absolutely key figures:

  • Estimated average 2005 carbon storage in Western ecosystems – 13,920 terragrams. (uncertainty range – 12,418–15,460)
  • Projected 2050 carbon storage – 13,743-19,407 terragrams
  • Annual average capture of carbon in western ecosystems – 91 terragrams – equals 4.9 percent of US net fossil-fuel emissions.

Those numbers hammer home the two takeways.  By 2050 western ecosystems might store less carbon than now, or substantially larger amounts.  The uncertainties are in climate change and land use change. And even the best performance will only make a small dent in atmospheric carbon accumulations if we continue to let them grow.  It is time to back out of fossil fuels fast through a combination of efficiency and clean energy.  Then we can direct natural carbon accumulation to its most critical climate task – the long-term project of reducing atmospheric CO2 to a level consonant with climate stability.  Now over 390 parts per million, it must be driven down to 350 and under.  That is the goal of the Northwest Biocarbon Initiative.

USGS scientist Ben Sleeter underscored the varying effects of different climate pathways during a Wednesday report release at the American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco.  He showed a slide depicting how Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change scenarios affect projected western carbon accumulations.  Under less aggressive emissions reductions scenarios (A1b and A2) annual additions to western carbon storage by 2050 dip as much as 16 percent, to 76 terragrams a year.   Under a scenario in which the west is comparatively less hot and dry (B1) annual carbon accumulation increases 11 percent to 101 terragrams.

Because other factors are in play, there is a wider uncertainty band.  USGS projects that western ecosystems might absorb 114 terragrams in any given year, or actually emit 2.9. This has to do with land use changes such as conversion of forests to residential development, and assumptions about the projected level of wildfires.  Indicatively, much of the projected decline in carbon storage capacity is in grasslands, shrublands and forests of the Western Cordillera. Essentially the west’s higher mountain regions beyond the maritime West Coast forests, the Cordillera stores the largest share of the west’s carbon, an estimated 8,163 terragrams.  These are areas that have already seen an upsurge of drought-driven wildfires such as last summer’s in Colorado and New Mexico.

We urgently need to preserve our current natural carbon stocks by limiting land use change and fossil fuel emissions driving climate change.  We also will likely have to consider more active efforts to upgrade carbon sequestration beyond natural accumulation projected by USGS, such as reforestation and planting new forests.  What we cannot do is continue to add to growing atmospheric carbon levels and hope to return to anything like a stable climate system.  The new USGS study provides the carbon math to conclusively nail home that point.

Author Bio

A founding member of the Climate Solutions team, Patrick developed the knowledge base for much of Climate Solutions’ advocacy work and helped shape the sustainability and clean tech agenda of key policymakers, researchers and business leaders around the Northwest. Patrick served as Research Director until the end of 2013, and has now moved on to work through his independent global sustainability consultancy, MROC, and serves as 350 Seattle Sustainable Solutions Working Group co-facilitator and member of its governing Hub.

His series of papers on clean-energy technology and Northwest economic opportunity from 1998-2002 helped catalyze the past decade’s wave of policy activity and investment in the clean economy sector.

Patrick also co-authored Stormy Weather: 101 Solutions to Global Climate Change (New Society, 2001) with Guy Dauncey.

Patrick likes to spend his free time walking, reading history, and playing music. He lives in Seattle and ventures south regularly to sing in a Portland rock band. 

Patrick's email is cascadia2012 (at) gmail.com

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