Curbing Canadian forest fires could be an affordable way to cut emissions: study
Better wildfire management in Canadian and Alaskan forests could offer a cost-effective way to limit greenhouse gas emissions, a new study says.
Research published in the journal Science Advances on Wednesday found wildfires in North American boreal forests could represent about three per cent of global carbon dioxide emissions under the Paris Climate Agreement’s budget to limit warming below 1.5 C.
But enhanced fire management could avoid the release of up to 3.87 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide by 2050, it said.
Carly Phillips, lead author of the study, said wildfires were a huge threat to climate change mitigation goals.