18/01/2021

(AU) Net-Zero, Carbon-Neutral, Carbon-Negative … Confused By All The Carbon Jargon? Then Read This

The Conversation

Shutterstock

Author
 is Senior Lecturer and DECRA Fellow, University of Newcastle.
Countries around the world are taking steps to tackle climate change and become net-zero emitters of carbon dioxide (CO₂) by 2050.

Most recently, Joe Biden’s presidential election win means the US is the latest nation to adopt the goal. So what does net-zero mean? Completely eliminating all greenhouse gas emissions?

Not necessarily. The “net” part of net-zero means we can still emit CO₂, as long as we offset (or remove) those emissions from the atmosphere by the same amount in other places.

You might have heard a lot of talk about “going net-zero” in the media lately. China recently announced it intends to achieve the goal by 2060.

France
, the United Kingdom and New Zealand will go net-zero by 2050. In Australia, all states and territories have a net-zero strategy and the federal government is under pressure to make a national commitment.

You might also have heard references to “zero emissions”, “low emissions” and going “carbon-neutral” So let’s get clear on what all these terms mean in practice.

Many of Australia’s peers have adopted net-zero emissions targets. Shutterstock

Getting to grips with net-zero

It’s not just countries that can produce net-zero emissions. The term can also apply to a state, city, company or even a single building.

Under a net-zero scenario, emissions are still being generated but they’re offset by the same amount elsewhere. Examples of offset activities include planting trees to absorb CO₂ or using other natural ecosystems to increase carbon stored in the biosphere.

The term “carbon-neutral” is sometimes used instead of net-zero, and they broadly mean the same thing. There are also two specific categories of carbon-neutral technologies that are relevant here:

  • a process that generates CO₂ in a short-term cycle which does not add to global warming. An example of this is bioenergy, where CO₂ is initially absorbed by organic material, then released on conversion to energy. Overall, emissions are stable and there is no net increase in CO₂.

  • a process that generates CO₂ but captures and sequesters (stores) it, rather than releasing it to the atmosphere. An example of this is a coal-fired power plant fitted with carbon capture and storage technology.

Bioenergy is a carbon-neutral technology. Shutterstock

Don’t get confused with these terms

To understand the term “net-zero emissions”, we must also understand what it is not. It should not be confused with the following related, but separate, concepts:

Zero emissions: this refers to a process where no CO₂ is released at all. In fact, in our current global mining and manufacturing system, no technology produces zero emissions.

Technologies such as solar panels and wind energy are often said to be zero-emissions but technically, they’re not. They have what are known as “embedded emissions” – those created in manufacturing the technology. However wind and solar produce no ongoing emissions after installation, unlike fossil fuel energy.

Carbon-negative: This means removing CO₂ from the atmosphere, or sequestering more CO₂ than is emitted. This might include a bioenergy process with carbon capture and storage.

Low emissions: Generating greenhouse gases at a lower rate than business as usual. Examples include switching from coal-fired to gas-fired power to generate the same amount of electricity, but with fewer emissions.

Wind energy produces no ongoing CO2 emissions. Shutterstock

OK, back to net-zero There are a few key ways to move to net-zero emissions, which are reflected in most national plans:

  • drastically reduce or eliminate the use of fossil fuels in the energy sector (including transport)

  • improve efficiency and/or develop new technology in other sectors generating emissions but unable to easily reduce them, such as manufacturing and agriculture

  • invest in bio-sequestration (also known as reforestation or tree-planting) and carbon-negative technologies to offset any continuing or unavoidable emissions.

No technology or quantity of trees planted could offset the emissions currently generated globally. That’s why nearly every net-zero plan includes first reducing, and eventually replacing, fossil fuels.

Fossil fuels could be used to achieve net-zero with offsets or carbon capture and storage, but in many cases this is not actually the most cost-effective or practical pathway to net-zero.

Achieving only the first two points would not take the world to net-zero. Carbon-negative approaches – removing CO₂ from the atmosphere – will also be needed.

Most national plans achieve this through land management techniques such as reforestation. However the amount of CO₂ offset through natural carbon-negative solutions can be difficult to measure.

Additionally the long-term delivery of the carbon offsets cannot always be guaranteed – for example, a replanted forest may die or be burnt in a bushfire releasing CO₂ back to the atmosphere.

Other more engineered solutions can also remove CO₂ from the atmosphere. They include the use of biochar – a charcoal-like material added to soil. It promotes microbial activity and soil clumps which prevents organic plant matter breaking down and releasing carbon. But this method is still not perfect.

Biochar helps boost soil carbon stores. Shutterstock

CO₂: problem or opportunity?

Global progress on emissions reduction has been so slow that simply cutting emissions won’t avert a climate catastrophe.

Even if the world manages to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050, we may still blow our “carbon budget” – the amount of CO₂ that can be emitted if Earth’s temperature rise is to stay below 1.5℃ this century. So we must find ways to first eliminate emissions, then remove existing CO₂.

It is foreseeable Earth will one day rely on carbon-negative technologies that draw CO₂ from the air and stabilise it in useful products. For example, direct air carbon capture and storage (which is still under development) could one day remove CO₂ and use it in products such as building materials and plastics.

Such a process would treat CO₂ as a valuable input material – turning Earth’s biggest problem into an opportunity for innovation.

The move towards net-zero is crucial to avoid a climate catastrophe. And the time to move is not tomorrow or “by 2050” – it’s now.

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Editorial: Climate Change Remains The Greatest Crisis Of Our Crisis-Filled Era

Los Angeles Times - Editorial Board

Smoke hovers over the forest amid the August Complex fire in September. (Mike McMillan / USFS)

As the nation deals with the tragic drama of President Trump’s final days in office, and the world reels under a now-year-long assault by a virus, the Earth continues to evolve into a dangerously inhospitable environment. And it is our collective fault.

This past year was, in essence, in a statistical tie with 2016 for the hottest on record, with temperatures driven upward by the warming effects of human activities that spew carbon and other greenhouse compounds into the atmosphere.

Temperatures breached 100 degrees in, of all places, Siberia, setting a record for north of the Arctic Circle. Climate change-driven wildfires scorched the Earth’s surface from Australia to the American West — the August Complex fire in Northern California became the first in the state to burn more than 1 million acres — to the Arctic, all adding yet more greenhouse gases to the atmosphere.

It is telling, some climate scientists argue, that the 10 warmest years on record have occurred since 2005 — including each of the last seven years — suggesting a steady pace upward that could push the average global temperature to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels within the decade. That, notably, is the level at which scientists believe nature will deliver even more dire consequences than what we’re already experiencing.

So what is the world doing about this? Hardly much of anything at levels sufficient to address the problem. Part of the drag has been the Trump administration’s abject opposition to efforts to reduce our production and use of fossil fuels, an immoral and arrogant policy of prioritizing short-term (and short-lasting) profits above the health of the planet and everything that lives on it.

But other nations have been slow to act as well, something we hope will change with President-elect Joe Biden’s pledge to once again make the U.S. a global leader. He already has named John F. Kerry who, as the Obama administration’s secretary of State, was instrumental in reaching the 2015 Paris agreement to combat climate change, as an international envoy on the issue, and is creating a White House office to address climate change domestically to be led by Gina McCarthy, Obama’s head of the Environmental Protection Agency. Both will be working within the framework of Biden’s ambitious climate-change agenda.

As the United Nations annual Adaptation Gap Report released Thursday shows, nations have a long way to go. The report found that while nearly three of four nations recognize the need for direct and concerted action to adapt to the changes already underway, few have actually devised plans sufficient to address it, and annual global funding by wealthy nations to help under-developed nations is less than half of what is needed.

That followed annual U.N. reports released in December that found similarly distressing mismatches between individual nations’ need to reduce emissions, and the reality. Even if countries meet the promises they made under the Paris agreement, the average global temperature would still rise by the end of the century to 3.2 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels. The world’s nations would need to triple promised reductions in carbon emissions to meet Paris’ target of 2 degrees, and quintuple the reductions to hit the lower, preferred target of 1.5 degrees.

Instead, while nations need to cut fossil fuel production by about 6% a year through 2030 to meet the Paris goals, “countries are instead planning and projecting an average annual increase of 2%.” We clearly are going in the wrong direction, with disastrous results in the offing.

It’s difficult to say whether the broad contours of Biden’s climate plan will get us where we need to be, especially since aggressive spending and investment will require the cooperation of Congress. Even though Trump will be gone shortly, his coterie of climate-change deniers remain in the House and Senate, and we can expect Republicans who spent the last four years embracing deficit spending like New Deal Democrats to suddenly become worried about the nation’s overdrawn checking account.

Adapting to the realities of climate change will be expensive, but not confronting this head-on and in as unified a manner as possible will endanger lives, disrupt food chains and biospheres, propel even more migration of climate refugees, and potentially destabilize governments. The world cannot afford that. 

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6 Must-Read Climate Books That'll Inspire You To Take Action In 2021

Vogue - Emily Chan

From Greta Thunberg’s No One Is Too Small To Make a Difference to Jane Fonda’s What Can I Do?: The Truth About Climate Change and How to Fix It—here are the climate change books to read now

© Ben Stansall / Getty Images

If you’ve resolved to do more to help our planet this year, then making sure you read up on the climate crisis is a good place to start. 

In fact, actor and activist Jane Fonda has revealed that it was a book—Naomi Klein’s On Fire: The Burning Case for a Green New Deal (Allen Lane, 2019)— that inspired her to start her weekly Fire Drill Friday protests in Washington DC, which made headlines around the world in 2019. 

“Naomi’s book made clear that right now is the last possible moment in history when changing course can mean saving lives and species on an unimaginable scale,” Fonda explains in her own book, What Can I Do?: The Truth About Climate Change and How to Fix It (HQ, 2020). “I knew what I needed to do, and I felt it so strongly I was quivering all over.”

To find out how you can help fight climate change, here are six essential reads to add to your list this year.

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1. The Future We Choose: Surviving the Climate Crisis

by
Christiana Figueres and Tom Rivett-Carnac (Manilla Press, 2020)

In need of a hopeful vision of how we can tackle the climate crisis?

Look no further than The Future We Choose, written by former UN climate chief Christiana Figueres and political lobbyist Tom Rivett-Carnac.

The book presents two scenarios for 2050:

“The World We Are Creating”—the terrifying trajectory we’re headed towards if we don’t take action now—and
“The World We Must Create”, which describes how we can successfully get global warming under control by achieving net-zero emissions and greening our cities.
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2. All We Can Save: Truth, Courage, and Solutions for the Climate Crisis

edited by
Dr Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and Dr Katharine K Wilkinson (One World, 2020)

Featuring the voices of 60 women from the environmental movement, All We Can Save is an anthology of essays and poems, ranging from biologist Janine Benyus’s powerful read on the reciprocity of trees to activist Varshini Prakash on how she co-founded the Sunrise Movement in the US.

Edited by marine biologist Dr Ayana Elizabeth Johnson, and climate author and strategist Dr Katharine K Wilson, it’s the perfect book to dip in and out of to help you make sense of the crisis, as well as offering solutions.

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 3. On Fire: The Burning Case for a Green New Deal

by
Naomi Klein (Allen Lane, 2019)

Canadian author and activist Naomi Klein has become one of the best-known voices on climate since her 2014 bestseller This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs the Climate (Allen Lane, 2014).

Her latest features a series of essays that highlight the emergency we’re facing and how a Green New Deal—a proposal set out by congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and senator Ed Markey in the US—could not only address global warming but the deep inequalities that exist in our societies.
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4. No One Is Too Small To Make A Difference
by
Greta Thunberg (Penguin, 2019)

If there’s anyone who can show the power we all have to create change, it’s Swedish activist Greta Thunberg, who’s inspired millions to take the streets around the world after spearheading the Fridays For Future movement—as seen in the recent Hulu documentary I Am Greta.

A collection of her most powerful speeches, this book is a call to action and a stark reminder of how little time we have left.

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5. What Can I Do?: The Truth About Climate Change and How to Fix It

by
Jane Fonda (HQ, 2020)

Charting her journey from despair to action, Jane Fonda explains how she ended up conducting her weekly protests on the steps of the US Capitol every Friday, which led to her being arrested five times for civil disobedience, in her now-famous red coat.

While recounting her Fire Drill Friday protests, she covers how we can save our oceans, how to hold the fossil-fuel industry accountable and environmental justice, as well as including a handy section at the end of each chapter on what we can do to help.       

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6. Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants

by
Robin Wall Kimmerer (Penguin, 2013) 

Did you know that Indigenous communities make up 5 per cent of the global population, but protect 80 per cent of the world’s biodiversity?

That’s why it’s so important that we respect Indigenous wisdom, as Robin Wall Kimmerer—professor of environmental and forest biology and member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation—explains in Braiding Sweetgrass, a beautifully written book that shows how we can learn from the plants and animals that surround us, and live in harmony with nature.

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