greenhouse gas

Turning the land from an emissions source to a carbon sink

By Corinna Byrne, from Fleeing Vesuvius. Farming and other land-based activities could do a lot to mitigate global warming. Ireland needs new policies to get its land to absorb CO2 rather than release it. The large amounts of carbon locked up in the country’s peatlands must be safeguarded and damaged bogs restored so that they can sequester carbon again. In addition, the use of biochar could reduce methane and nitrous oxide emissions and build up the fertility and carbon content of the soil.

Cap and Share Stakeholder Workshop

The Morgan, 10 Fleet St, Temple Bar, Dublin 2

Wednesday 27th August 2008

Programme:

10.50:

Registration and coffee

11.00:

Welcome from Professor Frank Convery

11.10:

Presentation from Mark Johnson (AEA Energy and Environment)

11.30:

Presentation from Cambridge Econometrics project team

11.50:

Questions and answers on project presentation

12.00:

Panel discussion

Panel members:

David Browne (Department of Transport)

Kelley Ann Kizzier (EPA)

Richard Douthwaite (FEASTA)

Seamus Boland (Irish Rural Link)

12.30:

Working lunch, open forum and questions and answers

13.45:

Close

About the Cap and Share Project

In December 2007, Comhar Sustainable Development Council commissioned a major piece of research into …