风化作用
温室气体
环境科学
二氧化碳
耕地
地球科学
土壤生产函数
固碳
碳纤维
地球大气中的二氧化碳
土壤水分
农业
地质学
土壤科学
地球化学
化学
生态学
海洋学
复合数
生物
复合材料
有机化学
成土作用
材料科学
作者
Euripides P. Kantzas,Maria Val Martin,Mark R. Lomas,Rafael M. Eufrasio,Phil Renforth,Amy L. Lewis,Lyla L. Taylor,Jean-Francois Mecure,Hector Pollitt,Pim Vercoulen,Negar Vakilifard,Philip B. Holden,Neil R. Edwards,Lenny Koh,Nick Pidgeon,Steven A. Banwart,David J. Beerling
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41561-022-00925-2
摘要
Achieving national targets for net-zero carbon emissions will require atmospheric carbon dioxide removal strategies compatible with rising agricultural production. One possible method for delivering on these goals is enhanced rock weathering, which involves modifying soils with crushed silicate rocks, such as basalt. Here we use dynamic carbon budget modelling to assess the carbon dioxide removal potential and agricultural benefits of implementing enhanced rock weathering strategies across UK arable croplands. We find that enhanced rock weathering could deliver net carbon dioxide removal of 6–30 MtCO2 yr−1 for the United Kingdom by 2050, representing up to 45% of the atmospheric carbon removal required nationally to meet net-zero emissions. This suggests that enhanced rock weathering could play a crucial role in national climate mitigation strategies if it were to gain acceptance across national political, local community and farm scales. We show that it is feasible to eliminate the energy-demanding requirement for milling rocks to fine particle sizes. Co-benefits of enhanced rock weathering include substantial mitigation of nitrous oxide, the third most important greenhouse gas, widespread reversal of soil acidification and considerable cost savings from reduced fertilizer usage. Our analyses provide a guide for other nations to pursue their carbon dioxide removal ambitions and decarbonize agriculture—a key source of greenhouse gases. Enhancing rock weathering across UK croplands could deliver substantial atmospheric carbon dioxide removal alongside agricultural co-benefits, according to coupled climate–carbon–nitrogen cycle model simulations.
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