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London to Istanbul: the carbon neutral race

Don't forget the carbon neutral race to Istambul with www.racethegreenmachines.com starts on July 24, from Battersea Park, London.

Please contact alex@carbonica.org  if you are thinking of putting together a team and are looking for sponsorship.

 

latest news
IMF floats climate change fund idea

Press Association, 9 Mar 2010

Global financier the International Monetary Fund has switched its attention to the environment with a plan for the world's governments to pool together to raise money needed to adapt to climate change.

EPA Has No Plans for Own Carbon-Trading Program, Jackson Says

Business Week, 9 Mar 2010

The Obama administration has no plans to set up a “cap-and-trade” program for greenhouse gases under existing law if Congress doesn’t pass legislation doing so, the head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said.
EU 'imports' a third of its carbon emissions

BBC News, 9 Mar 2010

Rich countries including several EU nations are "importing" about a third of their CO2 emissions, says a study.

High-carbon ice age mystery solved

New Scientist, 8 Mar 2010

How come a big ice age happened when carbon dioxide levels were high? It's a questions climate sceptics often ask. But sometimes the right answer is the simplest: it turns out CO2 levels were not that high after all.
Our trees

It is important to choose the species of trees according to how valuable they are to capture CO2 during their growth.

Hardwood and softwood differences actually have to do with plant reproduction, but are also more useful as terms for categorizing harvestable trees rather than good-producing trees. All trees reproduce by producing seeds, but seed structures vary. Our partners also propagate trees (especially fruit trees) by using cuttings.

Hardwood trees are angiosperms, plants that produce seeds with some sort of covering. This might be a fruit, such as an apple, or a hard shell, such as an acorn or hickory nut.

HARDWOOD — Trees with broad, flat leaves as opposed to coniferous or needled trees. Wood hardness varies among the hardwood species, and some are actually softer than some softwoods.

DECIDUOUS — perennial plants which are normally leafless for some time during the year.

BROADLEAF — A tree with leaves that are broad, flat and thin and generally shed annually.

Species of trees planted

Name Carbon value % planted
Mahogany ideal 15%
Acacia ideal 15%
Oak ideal 6%
Eucalyptus ideal 5%
Teak ideal 2%
Laurel ideal 1%
Leucaena ideal 1%

Softwoods, on the other hand, are gymnosperms (conifers) with “naked” seed. These plants have seeds that fall to the ground with no covering. Pines, firs and spruces, which grow seeds in cones, fall into this category. In conifers, seeds are released into the wind once they mature. This spreads the plant’s seed over a wide area.

Softwood trees are usually evergreen, bear cones, and have needles or scale-like leaves. They include pine, spruces, firs, and cedars. Wood hardness varies among the conifer species, and some are actually harder than some hardwoods.

CONIFER — A tree belonging to the order Coniferales. Trees with needles or scale-like leaves and cones as opposed to broad, flat leaves that more often than not are coneless.

EVERGREEN — perennial plants which normally keep foliage or needles through the entire year.

Species of trees planted

Name Carbon value % planted
Cedar moderate 15%

Fruit and nut trees are typically not considered as either hardwood or softwood, since the primary usage of those terms is for harvestable wood, while fruit and nut trees have a far more vital function as food-producers rather than as sources of timber.

Species

Name Carbon value % planted
Orange moderate 5%
Lemon moderate 1%
Mango moderate 1%
Mandarin moderate 1%
Guaba moderate 1%
Avocado moderate 1%
Peach palm moderate 1%
Breadfruit moderate 1%
Breadnut moderate 1%
Coconut moderate 1%

Footnote: Data supplied by Sustainable Harvest International, reproduced with permission.