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Mass reforestation: combining tech and nature to fight climate change

Mass reforestation: combining tech and nature to fight climate change
Mass reforestation: combining tech and nature to fight climate change
The year 2023 is poised to be the warmest year on record, and that might be just the beginning of a series of record-breaking temperatures. From deadly heatwaves to waterfloods, countries in different parts of the planet are witnessing the impacts of climate change, and it is likely these events will become more of a regular occurrence (The Guardian, 2023). Against the catastrophic scenarios projected for the planet, scientists, activists, and international agencies have been pressuring governments to reduce carbon emissions. In 2019 alone, human activities released 43 billion tons of carbon into the atmosphere (Hausfather, 2019), including 1.76 billion tons of CO2 produced by wildfires, which is equivalent to more than double the annual CO2 emissions of Germany (World Economic Forum, 2021).
149-157
Springer Nature Switzerland
Tsujiguchi, Fernanda
660e9279-b2f4-4f18-a54f-76ddd53cd117
Coraiola, Diego m.
31e45891-a0a2-4f0d-8625-977336c832b9
Bernard-Rau, Brigitte
Tsujiguchi, Fernanda
660e9279-b2f4-4f18-a54f-76ddd53cd117
Coraiola, Diego m.
31e45891-a0a2-4f0d-8625-977336c832b9
Bernard-Rau, Brigitte

Tsujiguchi, Fernanda and Coraiola, Diego m. (2024) Mass reforestation: combining tech and nature to fight climate change. In, Bernard-Rau, Brigitte (ed.) Sustainability Stories: The Power of Narratives to Understand Global Challenges. Springer Nature Switzerland, pp. 149-157. (doi:10.1007/978-3-031-52300-7_17).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

The year 2023 is poised to be the warmest year on record, and that might be just the beginning of a series of record-breaking temperatures. From deadly heatwaves to waterfloods, countries in different parts of the planet are witnessing the impacts of climate change, and it is likely these events will become more of a regular occurrence (The Guardian, 2023). Against the catastrophic scenarios projected for the planet, scientists, activists, and international agencies have been pressuring governments to reduce carbon emissions. In 2019 alone, human activities released 43 billion tons of carbon into the atmosphere (Hausfather, 2019), including 1.76 billion tons of CO2 produced by wildfires, which is equivalent to more than double the annual CO2 emissions of Germany (World Economic Forum, 2021).

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Published date: 7 June 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504134
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504134
PURE UUID: 16845984-563b-4b88-ad73-d54c6a8e7988
ORCID for Diego m. Coraiola: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2292-627X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 26 Aug 2025 17:04
Last modified: 27 Aug 2025 02:21

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Contributors

Author: Fernanda Tsujiguchi
Author: Diego m. Coraiola ORCID iD
Editor: Brigitte Bernard-Rau

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