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Carbon: The Ecosystems View

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    Most of the conversation
    about carbon today
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    is about fossil fuel emissions.
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    And most of the energy
    of environmentalists,
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    in the climate movement, especially,
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    is to find ways
    to reduce carbon emissions.
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    What has been left out
    of the conversation
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    to a large extent, not entirely,
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    is the role of forests
    and wetlands and soil
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    in sequestering carbon,
    taking carbon out of the atmosphere,
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    and restoring a healthy carbon cycle,
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    where whatever carbon is produced,
    it is reabsorbed again.
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    What I have learned
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    is that the contribution
    of land-use changes to atmospheric carbon
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    is at least as much as the contribution
    of burning fossil fuels.
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    Exposing soil to oxidation puts
    tremendous amounts of CO2 into the air,
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    and the ruin of the biological systems
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    prevents that released carbon
    from being brought back into the soil.
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    When trees and grass and other plants
    uptake carbon from the air,
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    a lot of it goes underground,
    taking the form of organic compounds,
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    which means carbon
    containing compounds that form soil,
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    and that stay underground
    could be for a year,
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    could be for a decade,
    could be for a hundred years.
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    Some of them are
    deeply sequestered in the soil
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    so they're constantly
    pulling carbon out of the air
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    and putting it underground
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    so much so that carbon dioxide levels
    in the atmosphere have been rising
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    just lower than would have been expected
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    in models that are based
    on how much we're emitting.
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    The reason that they increased
    slower than expected
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    is because the more
    that there is in the atmosphere
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    the more the plants take up.
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    Of course, they're not
    increasing their uptake
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    fast enough to offset emissions,
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    but it points to the capacity for life
    to maintain atmospheric balance
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    if we're not getting in the way.
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    Unfortunately, we're getting in the way.
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    Today I think we have something
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    like half of the trees
    that we had before civilization.
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    Half of the mangrove swamps of Asia
    have been destroyed.
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    80% of the seagrass meadows
    on their New England coast for gone.
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    We have rising the missions,
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    and these organs of Gaia
    that maintain a healthy carbon cycle
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    have been destroyed.
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    So what are we going to do about it?
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    Subtitles by Maurício Kakuei Tanaka
Title:
Carbon: The Ecosystems View
Description:

How do ecosystems affect atmospheric carbon? It turns out they keep the atmosphere in balance more than one might think.

Support me on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Jimi
Make a one-time donation: https://paypal.me/JimiSol

This video is based on the writing of Charles Eisenstein. Visit Charles' Website for more related content: https://www.charleseisenstein.org/
Visit Charles' YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/CharlesEisenstein/

Music: https://www.purple-planet.com

Sources:

Deforestation's effect on atmospheric CO2:
Rosa, Isabel M.D., et al. The Environmental Legacy of Modern Tropical Deforestation. 2016. https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(16)30625-X

The contribution of land-use changes to atmospheric CO2:
Arneth, A., Sitch, S., Pongratz, J. et al. Historical carbon dioxide emissions caused by land-use changes are possibly larger than assumed. 2017. https://www.nature.com/articles/ngeo2882

Atmospheric CO2 has been rising slower than expected in emissions-centric models:
Keenan, Trevor F et al. Recent pause in the growth rate of atmospheric CO2 due to enhanced terrestrial carbon uptake. 2016. https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms13428

45.8% of trees have been cut down:
Crowther, T., Glick, H., Covey, K. et al. Mapping tree density at a global scale. 2015. https://www.nature.com/articles/nature14967

Wetlands have declined by 57%:
Davidson, Nick. How much wetland has the world lost? Long-term and recent trends in a global wetland area. 2014. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/266388496_How_much_wetland_has_the_world_lost_Long-term_and_recent_trends_in_global_wetland_area

80% of the seagrass meadows on the New England coast are gone:
Beem, Nora & Short, Frederick., Subtidal Eelgrass Declines in the Great Bay Estuary, New Hampshire, and Maine, USA. 2009. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/226257090_Subtidal_Eelgrass_Declines_in_the_Great_Bay_Estuary_New_Hampshire_and_Maine_USA

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Amplifying Voices
Project:
Environment and Climate Change
Duration:
02:26
Marta Quirós Alarcón edited English subtitles for Carbon: The Ecosystems View
Maurício Kakuei Tanaka edited English subtitles for Carbon: The Ecosystems View
Maurício Kakuei Tanaka edited English subtitles for Carbon: The Ecosystems View
Maurício Kakuei Tanaka edited English subtitles for Carbon: The Ecosystems View

English subtitles

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