First we have to declare 'peak livestock', then eat less beef and more beans.
TreeHugger Melissa has written that if we all swapped beans for beef, then we could meet emission goals. I have written that planting trees could be a "mind-blowing" solution to climate change, the best available method of carbon capture and storage. Now scientists have put two and two together and come up with four measures, including reducing the land area devoted to livestock and planting it with trees.
Published in the Lancet, the team lead by Helen Harwatt of the Harvard Law School writes:
The scientists call for four measures, including:
Civilian Conservation Corps planting trees/ National Archives/Public Domain
So it is a double-whammy where you reduce greenhouse gas emissions by lowering our reliance on meat, along with maximizing the growth of native vegetation and trees.
And of course, we have to do it now, because all those other methods of carbon capture are still in the labs. "Without such land restoration, CO2 removal from the atmosphere relies on methods currently unproven at scale, increasing the risk of temperatures rising high enough to tip various Earth systems into unstable states. This instability could result in the loss of coral reefs and major ice sheets, and increases the uncertainty of maintaining life-supporting ecosystems."
This flew by while I was writing this post. Eating less beef and more beans is something we can do right now. Planting trees is not exactly new tech. We have run out of time and cannot wait for many of the fancier technologies, but we can do this. Right?