{"title":"Wood Vault: remove atmospheric CO2 with trees, store wood for carbon sequestration for now and as biomass, bioenergy and carbon reserve for the future","authors":"Ning Zeng, Henry Hausmann","doi":"10.1186/s13021-022-00202-0","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><h3>Background</h3><p>Wood harvesting and storage (WHS) is a hybrid Nature-Engineering combination method to combat climate change by harvesting wood sustainably and storing it semi-permanently for carbon sequestration. To date, the technology has only been purposefully tested in small-scale demonstration projects. This study aims to develop a concrete way to carry out WHS at large-scale.</p><h3>Results</h3><p>We describe a method of constructing a wood storage facility, named Wood Vault, that can bury woody biomass on a mega-tonne scale in specially engineered enclosures to ensure anaerobic environments, thus preventing wood decay. The buried wood enters a quasi-geological reservoir that is expected to stay intact semi-permanently. Storing wood in many environments is possible, leading to seven versions of Wood Vault: (1) Burial Mound (Tumulus or Barrow), (2) Underground (Pit, Quarry, or Mine), (3) Super Vault, (4) Shelter, (5) AquaOpen or AquaVault with wood submerged under water, (6) DesertOpen or DesertVault in dry regions, (7) FreezeVault in cold regions such as Antarctica. Smaller sizes are also possible, named Baby Vault. A prototype Wood Vault Unit (WVU) occupies 1 hectare (ha, 100 m by 100 m) of surface land, 20 m tall, stores up to 100,000 m<sup>3</sup> of wood, sequestering 0.1 MtCO<sub>2</sub>. A 1 MtCO<sub>2</sub> y<sup>−1</sup> sequestration rate can be achieved by collecting currently unused wood residuals (WR) on an area of 25,000 km<sup>2</sup>, the size of 10 typical counties in the eastern US, corresponding to an average transportation distance of less than 100 km. After 30 years of operation, such a Wood Vault facility would have sequestered 30 MtCO<sub>2</sub>, stored in 300 WVUs, occupying a land surface of 300 ha. The cost is estimated at $10–50/tCO<sub>2</sub> with a mid-point price of $30/tCO<sub>2</sub>. To sequester 1 GtCO<sub>2</sub> y<sup>−1</sup>, wood can be sourced from currently unexploited wood residuals on an area of 9 Mkm<sup>2</sup> forested land (9 million square kilometers, size of the US), corresponding to a low areal harvesting intensity of 1.1 tCO<sub>2</sub> ha<sup>−1</sup> y<sup>−1</sup>. Alternatively, giga-tonne scale carbon removal can be achieved by harvesting wood at a medium harvesting intensity of 4 tCO<sub>2</sub> ha<sup>−1</sup> y<sup>−1</sup> on 3 Mkm<sup>2</sup> of forest (equivalent to increasing current world wood harvest rate by 25%), or harvest on 0.8 Mkm<sup>2</sup> forest restored from past Amazon deforestation at high harvest intensity, or many combinations of these and other possibilities. It takes 1000 facilities as discussed above to store 1 GtCO<sub>2</sub> y<sup>−1</sup>, compared to more than 6000 landfills currently in operation in the US. After full closure of a Wood Vault, the land can be utilized for recreation, agriculture, solar farm, or agrivoltaics. A more distributed small operator model (Baby Vault) has somewhat different operation and economic constraints. A 10 giga-tonne sequestration rate siphons off only 5% of total terrestrial net primary production, thus possible with WHS, but extreme caution needs to be taken to ensure sustainable wood sourcing.</p><h3>Conclusions</h3><p>Our technical and economic analysis shows that Wood Vault can be a powerful tool to sequester carbon reliably, using a variety of wood sources. Most pieces of the technology already exist, but they need to be put together efficiently in practice. Some uncertainties need to be addressed, including how durability of buried wood depends on detailed storage methods and burial environment, but the science and technology are known well enough to believe the practicality of the method. The high durability, verifiability and low-cost makes it already an attractive option in the current global carbon market. Woody biomass stored in Wood Vaults is not only a carbon sink to combat current climate crisis, but also a valuable resource for the future that can be used as biomass/bioenergy and carbon supply. The quantity of this wood utilization can be controlled carefully to maintain a desired amount of CO<sub>2</sub> in the atmosphere to keep the Earth’s climate from diving into the next ice age, acting as a climate thermostat. The CO<sub>2</sub> drawdown time is on the order of 100 years while the ramp-up time is a decade. A sense of urgency is warranted because the CO<sub>2</sub> removal rate is limited by biosphere productivity, thus delayed action means a loss of opportunity. In conclusion, WHS provides a tool for managing our Earth system, which will likely remain forever in the Anthropocene.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":505,"journal":{"name":"Carbon Balance and Management","volume":"17 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.9000,"publicationDate":"2022-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://cbmjournal.biomedcentral.com/counter/pdf/10.1186/s13021-022-00202-0","citationCount":"8","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Carbon Balance and Management","FirstCategoryId":"89","ListUrlMain":"https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13021-022-00202-0","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"环境科学与生态学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 8
Abstract
Background
Wood harvesting and storage (WHS) is a hybrid Nature-Engineering combination method to combat climate change by harvesting wood sustainably and storing it semi-permanently for carbon sequestration. To date, the technology has only been purposefully tested in small-scale demonstration projects. This study aims to develop a concrete way to carry out WHS at large-scale.
Results
We describe a method of constructing a wood storage facility, named Wood Vault, that can bury woody biomass on a mega-tonne scale in specially engineered enclosures to ensure anaerobic environments, thus preventing wood decay. The buried wood enters a quasi-geological reservoir that is expected to stay intact semi-permanently. Storing wood in many environments is possible, leading to seven versions of Wood Vault: (1) Burial Mound (Tumulus or Barrow), (2) Underground (Pit, Quarry, or Mine), (3) Super Vault, (4) Shelter, (5) AquaOpen or AquaVault with wood submerged under water, (6) DesertOpen or DesertVault in dry regions, (7) FreezeVault in cold regions such as Antarctica. Smaller sizes are also possible, named Baby Vault. A prototype Wood Vault Unit (WVU) occupies 1 hectare (ha, 100 m by 100 m) of surface land, 20 m tall, stores up to 100,000 m3 of wood, sequestering 0.1 MtCO2. A 1 MtCO2 y−1 sequestration rate can be achieved by collecting currently unused wood residuals (WR) on an area of 25,000 km2, the size of 10 typical counties in the eastern US, corresponding to an average transportation distance of less than 100 km. After 30 years of operation, such a Wood Vault facility would have sequestered 30 MtCO2, stored in 300 WVUs, occupying a land surface of 300 ha. The cost is estimated at $10–50/tCO2 with a mid-point price of $30/tCO2. To sequester 1 GtCO2 y−1, wood can be sourced from currently unexploited wood residuals on an area of 9 Mkm2 forested land (9 million square kilometers, size of the US), corresponding to a low areal harvesting intensity of 1.1 tCO2 ha−1 y−1. Alternatively, giga-tonne scale carbon removal can be achieved by harvesting wood at a medium harvesting intensity of 4 tCO2 ha−1 y−1 on 3 Mkm2 of forest (equivalent to increasing current world wood harvest rate by 25%), or harvest on 0.8 Mkm2 forest restored from past Amazon deforestation at high harvest intensity, or many combinations of these and other possibilities. It takes 1000 facilities as discussed above to store 1 GtCO2 y−1, compared to more than 6000 landfills currently in operation in the US. After full closure of a Wood Vault, the land can be utilized for recreation, agriculture, solar farm, or agrivoltaics. A more distributed small operator model (Baby Vault) has somewhat different operation and economic constraints. A 10 giga-tonne sequestration rate siphons off only 5% of total terrestrial net primary production, thus possible with WHS, but extreme caution needs to be taken to ensure sustainable wood sourcing.
Conclusions
Our technical and economic analysis shows that Wood Vault can be a powerful tool to sequester carbon reliably, using a variety of wood sources. Most pieces of the technology already exist, but they need to be put together efficiently in practice. Some uncertainties need to be addressed, including how durability of buried wood depends on detailed storage methods and burial environment, but the science and technology are known well enough to believe the practicality of the method. The high durability, verifiability and low-cost makes it already an attractive option in the current global carbon market. Woody biomass stored in Wood Vaults is not only a carbon sink to combat current climate crisis, but also a valuable resource for the future that can be used as biomass/bioenergy and carbon supply. The quantity of this wood utilization can be controlled carefully to maintain a desired amount of CO2 in the atmosphere to keep the Earth’s climate from diving into the next ice age, acting as a climate thermostat. The CO2 drawdown time is on the order of 100 years while the ramp-up time is a decade. A sense of urgency is warranted because the CO2 removal rate is limited by biosphere productivity, thus delayed action means a loss of opportunity. In conclusion, WHS provides a tool for managing our Earth system, which will likely remain forever in the Anthropocene.
木材采伐和储存(WHS)是一种自然与工程相结合的混合方法,通过可持续地采伐木材并将其半永久性地储存以封存碳来应对气候变化。迄今为止,这项技术只在小规模示范项目中进行了有目的的测试。本研究旨在探索大规模开展WHS的具体途径。我们描述了一种建造木材储存设施的方法,名为wood Vault,它可以在特殊设计的外壳中掩埋数百万吨的木质生物质,以确保厌氧环境,从而防止木材腐烂。埋藏的木材进入一个准地质储层,预计将半永久保持完整。在许多环境中储存木材是可能的,导致七个版本的木库:(1)土墩(土坟或Barrow),(2)地下(坑,采石场或矿山),(3)超级库,(4)避难所,(5)水下淹没木材的AquaOpen或AquaVault,(6)干旱地区的DesertOpen或DesertVault,(7)南极洲等寒冷地区的FreezeVault。更小的尺寸也可以,命名为婴儿保险库。一个原型木库单元(WVU)占地1公顷(公顷,100米乘100米)的地表,高20米,储存高达10万立方米的木材,封存了10万吨二氧化碳。通过在25,000平方公里的面积上收集目前未使用的木材残留物(WR),可以实现100万吨co2 y - 1的固存率,这相当于美国东部10个典型县的面积,对应的平均运输距离不到100公里。经过30年的运行,这样的Wood Vault设施将封存3000万吨二氧化碳,储存在300个wvu中,占地300公顷。成本估计为每吨二氧化碳10-50美元,中间价格为每吨二氧化碳30美元。为了吸收1 GtCO2 y - 1,木材可以来自9 Mkm2林地(900万平方公里,相当于美国的大小)目前未开发的木材残留物,对应于1.1 tCO2 ha - 1 y - 1的低面积采伐强度。另外,千兆吨规模的碳去除可以通过以下方式实现:在3 Mkm2的森林上以4 tCO2 ha - 1 y - 1的中等采伐强度采伐木材(相当于将目前的世界木材采伐率提高25%),或在高采伐强度下从过去的亚马逊森林砍伐中恢复的0.8 Mkm2的森林采伐,或这些和其他可能性的多种组合。如上所述,需要1000个设施才能储存1亿吨二氧化碳,而美国目前有6000多个垃圾填埋场在运行。在木库完全关闭后,土地可以用于娱乐,农业,太阳能农场或农业发电。一个更分散的小运营商模式(Baby Vault)有一些不同的操作和经济约束。100千兆吨的固存率只吸收了陆地净初级生产量的5%,因此使用WHS是可能的,但需要非常谨慎,以确保可持续的木材采购。结论我们的技术和经济分析表明,利用多种木材资源,木库可以成为可靠固碳的有力工具。该技术的大部分部分已经存在,但它们需要在实践中有效地组合在一起。一些不确定因素需要解决,包括埋藏木材的耐久性如何取决于详细的储存方法和埋葬环境,但科学技术已经足够成熟,可以相信这种方法的实用性。高耐久性、可验证性和低成本使其在当前的全球碳市场上已经成为一个有吸引力的选择。储存在木库中的木质生物质不仅是应对当前气候危机的碳汇,而且是未来可用作生物质/生物能源和碳供应的宝贵资源。这种木材的使用量可以被仔细控制,以保持大气中所需的二氧化碳量,防止地球气候进入下一个冰河期,起到气候恒温器的作用。二氧化碳减少的时间大约是100年,而增加的时间是10年。由于二氧化碳的去除率受到生物圈生产力的限制,因此延迟行动意味着失去机会,因此有必要产生紧迫感。总之,WHS为管理我们的地球系统提供了一个工具,这个系统可能会永远存在于人类世。
期刊介绍:
Carbon Balance and Management is an open access, peer-reviewed online journal that encompasses all aspects of research aimed at developing a comprehensive policy relevant to the understanding of the global carbon cycle.
The global carbon cycle involves important couplings between climate, atmospheric CO2 and the terrestrial and oceanic biospheres. The current transformation of the carbon cycle due to changes in climate and atmospheric composition is widely recognized as potentially dangerous for the biosphere and for the well-being of humankind, and therefore monitoring, understanding and predicting the evolution of the carbon cycle in the context of the whole biosphere (both terrestrial and marine) is a challenge to the scientific community.
This demands interdisciplinary research and new approaches for studying geographical and temporal distributions of carbon pools and fluxes, control and feedback mechanisms of the carbon-climate system, points of intervention and windows of opportunity for managing the carbon-climate-human system.
Carbon Balance and Management is a medium for researchers in the field to convey the results of their research across disciplinary boundaries. Through this dissemination of research, the journal aims to support the work of the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) and to provide governmental and non-governmental organizations with instantaneous access to continually emerging knowledge, including paradigm shifts and consensual views.