Comment on Inspiring. Innovating.
the_mighty_kracken@lemmy.world 2 days agoThat carbon will stay sequestered if the trees are cut down, and the wood is used to build something that lasts for a long time.
Comment on Inspiring. Innovating.
the_mighty_kracken@lemmy.world 2 days agoThat carbon will stay sequestered if the trees are cut down, and the wood is used to build something that lasts for a long time.
starman2112@sh.itjust.works 2 days ago
A long time isn’t forever. Wood burns and wood rots. How many wooden structures from over a thousand years ago are still around?
the_mighty_kracken@lemmy.world 2 days ago
I’m just saying we aren’t helping ourselves with this plastic throw-away culture we’ve developed. Things like fine wood furniture can last as long as the owner wants it to. Every time something is replaced, it ends up somewhere in the environment, and we have the carbon footprint of something new being made. Beautifully made objects tend to be restored when they get old and ratty. When was the last time a Frank Lloyd Wright house was torn down to be replaced by a McMansion? That wood is sequestered.
starman2112@sh.itjust.works 2 days ago
The carbon in that wood is only sequestered until it rots or burns. It may be a hundred years, it may be a thousand years, but it has not been removed from the carbon cycle. Again, at best, you’re kicking the can down the road.
SolarMonkey@slrpnk.net 2 days ago
Don’t let perfect be the enemy of good.
This is one case where kicking the can down the road is the best option we really have, as long as we don’t stop working on the tech we need down said road. In a few hundred years we’ll probably have far better solutions, or a radically different lifestyle and technology than now. But we don’t have those now. And right now every little bit will help.
Keep in mind we’ve only been industrial for what, a couple hundred years? Sequestering for equivalent to the entire span we’ve been causing the problem seems like a pretty good start.