PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Carbon 'offsets' aren't working. Here's a way to improve nature-based climate solutions

Utah-led research provides roadmap for harnessing Earth’s natural processes to reduce atmospheric carbon dioxide

2025-07-30
(Press-News.org) A lot of the climate-altering carbon pollution we humans release into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels gets drawn into Earth’s oceans and landscapes through natural processes, mostly through photosynthesis as plants turn atmospheric carbon dioxide into biomass.

Efforts to slow the climate crisis have long sought to harness nature, often through carbon “offsets,” aimed at bolstering forests, wetlands, and agriculture, but have generally had only marginal success so far.

A new approach: contributions vs. credits

New research led by the University of Utah’s Wilkes Center for Climate Science & Policy offers a “roadmap” for accelerating climate solutions. To be published Thursday in the journal Nature, the paper analyses various strategies for improving such nature-based climate solutions, or NbCS, specifically exploring the role of the world’s forests in pulling carbon out of the atmosphere and storing it in long-lived trees and even in the ground.

“Nature-based climate solutions are human actions that leverage natural processes to either take carbon out of the atmosphere or stop the emissions of carbon to the atmosphere,” said lead author and forest ecologist William Anderegg, a professor of biology and past Wilkes Center director. “Those are the two main broad categories. There are the avoided emissions, and that's activities like stopping deforestation. Then there's the greenhouse gas-removal pathways. That's things like reforestation where you plant trees, and as those trees grow, they suck up CO2 out of the atmosphere.”

The U-led study, which includes leading scientists from nine other universities as part of a Wilkes Center Working Group effort, identifies four components where nature-based climate actions have not lived up to their billing and proposes reforms to improve their performance and scalability.

Forests are the focus because of trees’ ability to store vast amounts of carbon that would otherwise be in the atmosphere exacerbating the climate crises. Conversely, deforestation, especially in the Amazon rainforest, is releasing carbon at an alarming rate.

About half the emissions associated with human activity are absorbed into plants, through photosynthesis, and oceans, with the rest building up in the atmosphere where these gases trap heat.  Terrestrial ecosystems pull 31% of anthropogenic emissions out of the atmosphere, according to the study. While forests are seen as Earth’s most vital carbon sponge, current rates of deforestation release 1.9 gigatons of carbon a year, on par with Russia’s annual emissions. Thus, “actions to halt and reverse deforestation are a critical part of climate stabilization pathways,” the authors write.

The trouble with carbon offsets

Various programs are in place for companies to mitigate their emissions through purchasing “carbon offsets,” which fund projects aimed at preserving or restoring forests. But as currently configured, these programs are not delivering much in the way of climate benefits, according to Libby Blanchard, a postdoctoral researcher in Anderegg’s Utah lab.

“There are widespread problems with accounting for their climate impact,” said Blanchard, the paper’s second author who has extensively studied the impacts of offset programs. “For example, despite the potential for albedo to reduce or even negate the climate mitigation benefits of some forest carbon projects, calculating for the effect of albedo is not considered in any carbon-crediting protocols to date.”

To succeed, according to the study, a nature-based climate solution should

lead to net global cooling; result in additional climate benefits; avoid carbon “leakage;” store carbon long enough to make a difference. Finally, the study proposes structural reforms aimed at encouraging corporations to financially contribute to climate mitigation, as opposed to claim credit for something that may ultimately provide little climate benefit. A contribution approach would be more scientifically accurate and legally defensible than the current system, potentially resulting in higher quality projects, the authors argue.

The four critical factors explained

The first piece of the roadmap calls for accounting the various feedbacks to ensure that the NbCS results in an actual cooling effect on the climate. Planting trees can change a landscape’s albedo, that is its capacity to reflect the sun’s energy back into space.

“If you go in an ecosystem that is mostly snow covered and you plant really dark conifer trees, that can actually outweigh the carbon storage benefit and heat up the planet,” Anderegg said.

Next, the project must result in actions that that would not have otherwise occurred.

“You have to change behavior or change some sort of outcome,” Anderegg said. “You can't just take credit for what was going to happen anyway. One great example here is if you pay money to keep a forest from deforestation, but it was never going to be cut down to begin with, then you haven't done anything for the climate.”

The third problem is known as “leakage,” which occurs when a climate action simply pushes a land-disturbing activity from one place to another.

And the fourth component address climate actions’ durability, or how long they will keep carbon out of the atmosphere. This is particularly important given the longevity of carbon dioxide molecules. When fossil fuels are burned, carbon that was permanently locked in geological formations is released into the biosphere where it will cycle in and out of living things and landscapes for thousands of years.

A climate solution should always aim to keep carbon locked up for as long as possible, preferably at least a century. But drought, storms, insects, wildfire and other climate-related hazards can quickly negate any gains by killing trees.

“You have to know how big the risks are, and you have to account for those risks in the policies and programs,” Anderegg said. “Otherwise, basically you're going to lose a lot of that carbon storage as climate change accelerates the risks.”

The methods now in place, known as “buffer pools,” to account for these risks are not robust or rigorous currently, according to research by Anderegg’s lab, which expects to release a study soon highlighting potential fixes.

####

The study appears July 30 in the journal Nature under the title, “Towards more effective nature-based climate solutions in global forests,” with contributions from several universities and nonprofits. Funding came from the National Science Foundation.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Preserving and promoting clinical trial representativeness

2025-07-30
About The Study: This review synthesizes the latest policies and initiatives concerning representation in clinical research and provides a strategic framework to ensure scientific validity of clinical trials by operationalizing broad representation at all levels. A coordinated approach among stakeholders is needed to address the scientific value of trial representation of the intended use population. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Roxana Mehran, MD, email roxana.mehran@mountsinai.org. To access ...

Study reveals mixed impact of state e-cigarette flavor bans on tobacco use

2025-07-30
A new study by investigators from Mass General Brigham examined the effects of policies banning flavored e-cigarettes on adults and young people. Investigators found that e-cigarette use significantly declined among young adults and adults in states that had enacted flavor bans relative to states that did not. However, declines in cigarette smoking also slowed in those states with flavor bans relative to other states—a potential unintended consequence of the bans. Results are published in JAMA Network Open. “Both ...

McMaster research offers promising new treatment for liver cancer

2025-07-30
Liver cancer cells thrive on fat, posing a serious risk of cancer diagnosis for millions of people living with fatty liver disease. But researchers at McMaster University in collaboration with Espervita Therapeutics have developed a promising new treatment that helps the immune system attack and destroy these tumours. The discovery, detailed in a study published in Nature on July 30, 2025, opens new possibilities for slowing tumour growth and empowering the body’s natural defences. This is particularly important, as current treatments for ...

Most US adults have hearts older than their actual age. How old is yours?

2025-07-30
CHICAGO --- Most U.S. adults have a “heart age” several years older than their chronological age — sometimes by more than a decade. And that gap is wider among men and among those with lower incomes or education or who identify as Black or Hispanic, according to a new study led by Northwestern Medicine. As part of the study, the Northwestern scientists created a free online tool that calculates a person’s “heart age” based on their risk for cardiovascular disease, using routine health data such as blood pressure, cholesterol levels and whether ...

JMIR Biomedical engineering invites submissions on voice phenotyping and vocal biomarkers

2025-07-30
(Toronto, July 30, 2025) JMIR Publications invites submissions to a new theme issue titled “Voice Phenotyping and Vocal Biomarkers” in its open access journal JMIR Biomedical Engineering. The premier, peer-reviewed journal is indexed in PubMed, PubMed Central, Scopus, DOAJ, Sherpa/Romeo, and EBSCO/EBSCO Essentials.   This Call for Papers is seeking high-quality submissions for a new e-collection on a leading-edge field that uses voice and speech analysis to advance the detection, monitoring, and treatment of health conditions.  This e-collection focuses on acoustic and ...

The metabolic dialogue between intratumoral microbes and cancer: implications for immunotherapy

2025-07-30
The tumor microenvironment (TME) represents a highly complex system that encompasses cellular components (such as cancer cells, stromal cells, and immune cells) and non-cellular components (such as blood vessels and signaling molecules)[1-3]. These diverse components engage in complex interactions with tumor cells and undergo dynamic changes during tumor progression. Specifically, intratumoral microbial metabolites play an important role on the TME. The metabolic products of these microorganisms encompass a range of bioactive molecules, including lactate, amino acids, short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), bile acids, trimethylamine N-oxide, and inosine. These metabolites, ...

Demographic data supporting FDA authorization of AI devices for Alzheimer disease and related dementias

2025-07-30
About The Study: Transparency of evidence supporting Food and Drug Administration (FDA) authorization of artificial intelligence (AI)- and machine learning -based devices for Alzheimer disease and related dementias was limited, precluding effective evaluation of training and validation dataset representativeness. Disease status (i.e., dementia type and distribution), age, and sex were reported for fewer than half of devices, while race and ethnicity data were rarely disclosed, raising uncertainty about real-world generalizability and clinical accuracy in intended populations.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding ...

How the common fungus Candida albicans colonizes the gut

2025-07-30
About 80% of people have the fungus Candida albicans in their gut. Although most of the time it persists unnoticed for years causing no health problems, C. albicans can turn into a dangerous microbe that causes serious diseases in many organs, including the urinary tract, lungs and brain. Understanding how this fungus colonizes the gut is key to preventing it from becoming harmful. Working with a mouse model, researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and international collaborators have discovered unexpected factors that help C. albicans ...

How are coastal New Jersey communities communicating hazards of climate change?

2025-07-30
Recent climate-related crises — from severe storms and flooding to extreme heat — have raised new questions about how local governments communicate the risk of these crises and what they are doing to keep their citizens safe. To better understand what this communication looks like at local level, and the factors that may be shaping it, researchers from Drexel University analyzed climate resilience planning information available on the public-facing websites of 24 coastal communities in New Jersey that are contending with the effects of sea level rise. Their report, recently published in the Journal of Extreme Events, ...

AI-based breast cancer risk technology receives FDA Breakthrough Device designation

2025-07-30
A new technology that harnesses AI to analyze mammograms and improve the accuracy of predicting a woman’s personalized five-year risk of developing breast cancer has received Breakthrough Device designation from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Developed by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, the software has been licensed to Prognosia Inc., a WashU startup company. The system analyzes mammograms to produce a risk score estimating the likelihood that a woman will develop breast cancer over the next five years. The technology is ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Scrumped fruit key to chimpanzee life and a major force of human evolution

Scientists discover new quantum state at the intersection of exotic materials

Healthy food systems: Microbial map reveals countless hidden connections between our food, health, and planet

Microbiome breakthrough: Gut bacterium may hold key to future treatments for widespread chronic diseases

Turning biodiversity upside down: Conservation maps miss fungal hotspots by focusing on plants

AI at the core: philanthropy fuels EMBL’s strategy

Synthetic torpor has potential to redefine medicine

Are you eligible for a clinical trial? ChatGPT can find out

New treatment could reduce brain damage from stroke, study in mice shows

4,000-year-old teeth record the earliest traces of people chewing psychoactive betel nuts

Efficient solar harvesting even in high humidity

Heavy drinking raises the risk of undesired pregnancy; cannabis use does not

New study shows young adults who use high strength cannabis do not ‘titrate’ to less risky levels of use

Black hole vibes

Actual distance travelled by migrating whales drastically underestimated

The eagles resistant to poisonous toads

Cyberstalking growing at faster rate than other forms of stalking

CPADS: a web tool for comprehensive pancancer analysis of drug sensitivity

Several healthy diet patterns are associated with reduced risk of type 2 diabetes regardless of ethnicity – shows meta-analysis of more than 800,000 people

Liver fibrosis to cancer: scientists map path to block deadly transition

Microbiota boost immunotherapy? A meta-analysis dives into fecal microbiota transplantation and immune checkpoint inhibitors

Cancer's double agents: Fibroblasts both help and hinder immunotherapy

Unveiling large multimodal models in pulmonary CT: A comparative assessment of generative AI performance in lung cancer diagnostics

AI can fake peer reviews and escape detection, study finds

T cell senescence in the tumor microenvironment

Simple solution to save lives globally: Low-cost ‘SimpleSilo’ offers hope for babies with gastroschisis

Curbing roadway fatalities hinges on shared responsibility and rethinking safety

Beta-HPV can directly cause skin cancer in immunocompromised people

Efforts underway to end race-based assessments of lung function

CAR-T cell therapy linked to increased risk of secondary primary malignancies globally

[Press-News.org] Carbon 'offsets' aren't working. Here's a way to improve nature-based climate solutions
Utah-led research provides roadmap for harnessing Earth’s natural processes to reduce atmospheric carbon dioxide