Carbon Sequestration: Difference between revisions

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=Solution=
Plant up 1B acres of cities with trees. And bite
https://chatgpt.com/share/69fe6a34-0fbc-83e8-b495-a3e2d654e608
https://chatgpt.com/share/69fe6a34-0fbc-83e8-b495-a3e2d654e608


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Revision as of 22:57, 8 May 2026

Solution

Plant up 1B acres of cities with trees. And bite

https://chatgpt.com/share/69fe6a34-0fbc-83e8-b495-a3e2d654e608

Category Approx. Billion Acres Notes
Total Earth Land Area 32.1 Includes deserts, mountains, ice, tundra, cities, agriculture, forests, etc.
Existing Forests 10.0 About 31% of total land area
Total Agricultural Land 11.9 Cropland + pasture/grazing land
Cropland 3.9 Land used directly for crops
Pasture / Grazing Land 8.0 Rangeland and grazing systems
Hot Deserts 7–8 Sahara, Arabian, Australian, etc.
Sahara Desert Alone 2.2 Largest hot desert on Earth
Urban / Built Infrastructure 0.5–1.0 Cities, roads, industrial zones, airports, etc.
Target CO2 Removal Needed Assumed Average Uptake Land Required
Offset Current Annual Atmospheric Excess ~20 Gt CO2/year 2 tons CO2/acre/year ~10 billion acres
Offset Current Annual Atmospheric Excess ~20 Gt CO2/year 4 tons CO2/acre/year ~5 billion acres
Offset Current Annual Atmospheric Excess ~20 Gt CO2/year 8 tons CO2/acre/year ~2.5 billion acres
Offset All Current Gross Human Emissions ~40 Gt CO2/year 4 tons CO2/acre/year ~10 billion acres

Key Insight

At a rough systems level, the amount of land theoretically required to biologically offset current net atmospheric CO2 accumulation is large but not obviously impossible at planetary scale. Roughly 2.5–10 billion acres of highly productive carbon-sequestering ecosystems could theoretically offset the current atmospheric excess of approximately 20 gigatons CO2 per year, depending on ecosystem productivity.

The main constraints are not only land area, but also:

  • Water availability
  • Soil fertility
  • Ecosystem suitability
  • Fire and drought risk
  • Carbon permanence
  • Food production competition
  • Governance and economic coordination

The dominant human land transformation today is agriculture and grazing, not cities or roads.