Carbon for soils, not soils for carbon
Wageningen University & Research · Graduate School Experimental Plant Sciences · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The role of soil organic carbon (SOC) sequestration as a 'win-win' solution to both climate change and food insecurity receives an increasing promotion. The opportunity may be too good to be missed! Yet the tremendous complexity of the two issues at stake calls for a detailed and nuanced examination of any potential solution, no matter how appealing. Here, we critically re-examine the benefits of global SOC sequestration strategies on both climate change mitigation and food production. While estimated contributions of SOC sequestration to climate change vary, almost none take SOC saturation into account. Here, we show that including saturation in estimations decreases any potential contribution of SOC…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 35.95
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 106
Authors
4- GYGabriel Y.K. MoinetCorresponding
Wageningen University & Research
- RHRenske Hijbeek
Graduate School Experimental Plant Sciences, Wageningen University & Research
- DPDetlef P. van Vuuren
Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, Utrecht University
- KGK.E. Giller
Graduate School Experimental Plant Sciences, Wageningen University & Research
Topics & keywords
- Soil water
- Environmental science
- Carbon fibers
- Soil carbon
- Carbon cycle
- Soil science
- Environmental chemistry
- Ecology
- Zero hunger