The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. experts look for local solutions to climate woes

Effort inspired by comprehens­ive plan to reverse global warming.

- By Nedra Rhone nedra. rhone@ ajc. com

In the spring of 2017, a boldly subtitled book became a national bestseller. “Drawdown,” wrote the authors, was “the most comprehens­ive plan ever proposed to reverse global warming.” The book, an extensive examinatio­n of 100 solutions that could substantia­lly reduce greenhouse gases over the next three decades, has influenced communitie­s, curriculum and conversati­ons about climate change.

Inspired by the global endeavor, the Ray C. Anderson Foundation in October launched Drawdown Georgia, an effort to bring a local lens to those climate solutions and reduce Georgia’s carbon impact by one- third in 10 years.

“The one thing Project Drawdown couldn’t do was tell any region what their solutions could be,” said John Lanier, executive director of the foundation, which provides funding and research that supports environmen­tal efforts. So for 18 months, a team of experts from the Universit y of Georgia, Georgia Institute of Technology, Emory University and other organizati­ons worked to determine which solutions were best suited to Georgia’s unique landscape.

The resulting 20 solutions, if widely adopted, could help Georgia reduce its annual carbon output by 35% over the next 10 years and serve as a model for other states to do the same.

“Georgia has regions that span conditions in most states in the U. S. There is something for everybody to be able to learn from,” said Marilyn Brown, a professor at Georgia Tech and principal investigat­or for Drawdown Georgia’s research team. “Georgia has the aspiration of being a leader in this.”

Despite the book’s success, drawdown is a word that hasn’t edged into mainstream usage. The term refers to how we can reduce the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Though carbon dioxide is often the focus of these efforts, greenhouse gases also include methane, nitrous oxide or any other gas that traps heat in the planet’s atmosphere, making it warmer than it would be otherwise.

When looking for solutions in Georgia, researcher­s fifirst eliminated any that didn’t apply, such as tropical rainforest­s, then focused on building a body of data that would help them understand each solution’s potential across the state.

The resulting 20 solutions for Georgia span five categories: electricit­y, food and agricultur­e, transporta­tion, land sinks ( ocean and land- based ecosystems that remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere) and buildings and materials.

Electricit­y and transporta­tion are Georgia’s greatest opportunit­y areas, and some of the solutions are already underway in the state, including rooftop and large- scale solar installati­ons. “I have always known that solar energy in Georgia was appealing for generating electricit­y from large- scale solar farms or solar rooftop, but I did not fully appreciate the magnitude of its potential contributi­on,” Brown said.

Achieving the desired greenhouse gas reduction from rooftop solar installati­ons would require 295,000 homes to install new 5- kilowatt solar systems. For largescale solar, meeting the goals would mean adding 10 solar farms with 100 megawatts of power and 36 community solar systems with 5 megawatts of power.

In the transporta­tion category, Brown was surprised that alternativ­e mobility ( biking, walking, teleworkin­g) surfaced as a high- impact solution in Georgia, one that could reduce emissions by 1 million metric tons if 2.5% of car trips are eliminated by 2030.

Vehicles accounted for 43% of the state’s carbon dioxide emissions in 2017, and the greatest gains in the category would come from reducing diesel fuel use in the 4 million registered medium- and heavy- duty trucks in Georgia. A 10% reduction in diesel fuel would reduce emissions by 1 million metric tons by 2030.

With more t han 2 mil - lion tons of food wasted in Georgia every year, reducing that waste is a primary target under the food and agricultur­e banner. When food waste and other organic matter go to a landfill, they de compose and release methane gas. Composting, another way to cut down on food waste, is also considered a solution for Georgia.

Georgia’s forests already offset about 27% of emissions in the state, but further preserving and increasing the forests and wetlands across the state can also help reach the goals of Drawdown Georgia.

Completing the research was just the first phase, Lanier said. The next step is turning it into a movement that is embraced statewide. “We want this movement to be people as diverse as peanut farmers in South Georgia to midlevel managers at corporatio­ns in Atlanta to pastors at churches,” he said.

They have already begun collaborat­ing informally with organizati­ons such as the Georgia Forestry Associatio­n and Georgia Interfaith Power and Light. This month, they began appointing a leadership council to help build additional collaborat­ions.

Researcher­s plan to measure program success across the 20 solutions, and within a year, they plan to develop a carbon scorecard for Georgia’s cities and 159 counties that will help publicly identify each county’ s carbon footprint. Does one county have a large industrial base? Does another have heavy dependence on gas- powered vehicles? Where are the solar farms and rooftop installati­ons? Where are forest protection programs stronger? “Counties and metro areas know genericall­y or in some broad sense about their carbon emitters but they possibly ... never thought to add it up and compare with their neighbors,” Brown said.

While Lani er acknowledg­es the role policy will play in the ability to scale many of the Drawdown Georgia solutions, he hopes the effort begins from the ground up. “A year from now, I hope that we see this movement we are trying to create begin to scale organicall­y,” he said. “People will start to know about it, even if they don’t know about the Ray C. Anderson Foundation.”

 ?? BOB ANDRES/ BANDRES@ AJC. COM/ 2015 ?? Donald Chase leases land on his Oglethorpe farm for solar farms. Adding solar farms and solar rooftop installati­ons could help Georgia achieve the desired greenhouse gas reductions called for by some experts.
BOB ANDRES/ BANDRES@ AJC. COM/ 2015 Donald Chase leases land on his Oglethorpe farm for solar farms. Adding solar farms and solar rooftop installati­ons could help Georgia achieve the desired greenhouse gas reductions called for by some experts.

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