Carbon sequestration in soils and climate change mitigation—Definitions and pitfalls

Author:

Don Axel1ORCID,Seidel Felix1ORCID,Leifeld Jens2ORCID,Kätterer Thomas3ORCID,Martin Manuel4ORCID,Pellerin Sylvain5ORCID,Emde David1ORCID,Seitz Daria1ORCID,Chenu Claire6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Thünen Institute of Climate‐Smart Agriculture Braunschweig Germany

2. Climate and Agriculture Group Agroscope Zurich Switzerland

3. Department of Ecology Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Upsala Sweden

4. Info&Sols Unit INRAE Orléans France

5. ISPA, Bordeau Sciences Agro INRAE Villenave d'Ornon France

6. Ecosys Université Paris‐Saclay, INRAE, AgroParisTech Palaiseau France

Abstract

AbstractThe term carbon (C) sequestration has not just become a buzzword but is something of a siren's call to scientific communicators and media outlets. Carbon sequestration is the removal of C from the atmosphere and the storage, for example, in soil. It has the potential to partially compensate for anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions and is, therefore, an important piece in the global climate change mitigation puzzle. However, the term C sequestration is often used misleadingly and, while likely unintentional, can lead to the perpetuation of biased conclusions and exaggerated expectations about its contribution to climate change mitigation efforts. Soils have considerable potential to take up C but many are also in a state of continuous loss. In such soils, measures to build up soil C may only lead to a reduction in C losses (C loss mitigation) rather than result in real C sequestration and negative emissions. In an examination of 100 recent peer‐reviewed papers on topics surrounding soil C, only 4% were found to have used the term C sequestration correctly. Furthermore, 13% of the papers equated C sequestration with C stocks. The review, further, revealed that measures leading to C sequestration will not always result in climate change mitigation when non‐CO2 greenhouse gases and leakage are taken into consideration. This paper highlights potential pitfalls when using the term C sequestration incorrectly and calls for accurate usage of this term going forward. Revised and new terms are suggested to distinguish clearly between C sequestration in soils, SOC loss mitigation, negative emissions, climate change mitigation, SOC storage, and SOC accrual to avoid miscommunication among scientists and stakeholder groups in future.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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