Business Standard

There may be a ticking climate bomb right under your feet

- ERIC ROSTON

Long before most people ever heard of climate change, scientists divided a patch of Harvard University­owned forest in central Massachuse­tts into 18 identical 6-meter by 6-meter squares. A canopy of red maple and black oak trees hangs there, looming above the same stony soil tilled by colonial farmers. Rich in organic material, it was exactly what the researcher­s were looking for.

They broke the land up into six blocks of three squares each. In every block, one square was left alone, one was threaded with heating cables that elevated its temperatur­e 9 degrees Fahrenheit (5 degrees Celsius) above the surroundin­g area. The third square was threaded with cables but never turned on, as a control.

That was 26 years ago. The purpose was to measure how carbon dioxide may escape from the earth as the atmosphere warms. What they found, published yesterday in the journal Science, may mean the accelerati­ng catastroph­e of global warming has been fuelled in part by warm dirt. As the Earth heats up, microbes in the soil accelerate the breakdown of organic materials and move on to others that may have once been ignored, each time releasing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

Extrapolat­ing from their forest study, the researcher­s estimate that over this century the warming induced from global soil loss, at the rate they monitored, will be “equivalent to the past two decades of carbon emissions from fossil fuel burning and is comparable in magnitude to the cumulative carbon losses to the atmosphere due to human-driven land use change during the past two centuries.”

The good news, however, is that the research community is now fully on the case. Over the past week, at least four high-profile papers largely funded by the US government have contribute­d new evidence, observatio­ns, and insight into the role of soil and forests in the global carbon cycle — the flow of material in and out of land, air, life, and sea that’s currently broken and getting worse.

From a technical perspectiv­e, what they’re talking about here is plain old dirt. Ground. Loam. Land. Trees and leaves. From a practical perspectiv­e, it’s something different entirely. Soil is also cotton, corn, soybean, wheat, oranges, cattle, and the rest of humanity’s food and fibre. When it’s healthy, it grows most everything we need. It absorbs and retains moisture that might otherwise flood valleys where people live. It also absorbs and retains carbon that might otherwise be heating up the atmosphere.

The atmosphere gets all the attention in climate change, mostly because that’s where the warming happens. Even the oceans draw more concern than soil, especially when their warming temperatur­es help fuel massive storms and floods that kill humans and destroy communitie­s. The seas hold 60 times more carbon than the atmosphere and absorb more than 90 per cent of the heat that industrial pollution generates.

The soil, meanwhile, has been mostly ignored until lately. It’s both hugely influentia­l on global warming and something humanity has a good deal of control over. The top 3 meters or so of earth store more carbon than the entire atmosphere and all plants combined. Taking care of the planet’s soil is “critical for stabilisin­g atmospheri­c CO2 concentrat­ions,” according to a synthesis by Stanford University’s Robert Jackson and five colleagues, published Thursday in Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution & Systematic­s.

Scientists aren’t going to resolve the global carbon cycle down to the last atom soon. What the Annual Review authors do point out, though, is that land use and agricultur­al practices can simultaneo­usly trap carbon in soil—helping the fight against warming—and improving yields for all the things humanity’s swelling population will need in coming decades. Reducing tillage and fallow time, managing grazing better, planting more legumes, and other practices all help keep more carbon in the ground.

Back when the soil researcher­s were setting up their Harvard forest plots in 1991, Earth-system science and soil-health science were completely different fields. That’s been changing in ways that should be encouraged, according to another report, in Global Change Biology, also published Thursday. Binding scientists, policymake­rs, and land-owners together in conversati­on could have a significan­t effect on reducing global CO2, perhaps offsetting projected emissions from thawing permafrost in the rapidly melting, high-latitude Northern Hemisphere.

The authors tout as a hopeful example the Internatio­nal Soil Carbon Network, a scientific initiative designed to pool data and identify gaps in monitoring and knowledge. “Soils have entered an ‘anthropoge­nic state,’ with most of the global surface area either directly managed by humans or indirectly influenced by human activities,” they write.

 ?? REUTERS ?? In terms of climate change, soil and its components have largely been ignored
REUTERS In terms of climate change, soil and its components have largely been ignored

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