Yes the atmospheric CO2 increase doesn't differentiate between sourcesOldgreybeard wrote: ↑Sat Dec 17, 2022 10:39 am
Burning a tree releases ALL the sequestered CO2 built up over decades in a very short space of time.
Most decaying biomass is cycled fairly quickly, yes it has a sort of half life in the soil as it decays and soil organic carbon is a huge and very important reserve, as are peat bogs (which will be adversely affected as average temperatures go up and they dry out, a positive feedback effect that will cause them to respire CO2). Currently they tend to be in equilibrium, as new plants lay down the oldest are gradually respired.
Leaving it to decay takes decades for just a bit of the CO2 to be released, and much of it is never really released at all (which is why we have beds of coal and reserves of underground oil and gas, as breakdown products sequestered from trees and plants that grew millions of years ago).
I think oil and gas was mostly from marine organisms, coal OTOH is a quite different as it was laid down in hot swamps before any organisms had evolved to "eat" lignin, now we have plenty of fungi that will do the job.
It is irrelevant that the tree being burned took a few decades to grow as long as the annual increment matches that volume.
I agree but the ocean surface waters are in equilibrium with the atmosphere and have absorbed about 45% of all the extra CO2 produced since the beginning of the industrial revolution, as carbonic acid lowers the pH this is a problem in itself.
We need to start sequestering as much atmospheric CO2 as we can, as fast as we can. The oceans are doing their bit, but we need to do far more to reduce emissions and try and lock up CO2 in living things for a few decades, hopefully millennia.
So as we remove atmospheric CO2 (if we do) more will come out of solution from the sea and be released into the atmosphere.
I think anthropocentric CO2 is about 9 Giga Tonne of carbon per annum whereas the natural carbon cycle is about 200 Gtonne released to atmosphere and fractional more tied up in plant growth. So whereas most fossil derived CO2 is produced in concentrations around the developed world plant growth photosynthesises it throughout the world anywhere where conditions are right.
Intervention could be made by peoples throughout the world to take some of the growth that would be normally recycled by microbes into CO2 and water naturally and turn it into recalcitrant carbon...
Of course it cannot happen as we in the developed world will not pay others to do it.