Linking Data to Better Decisions

Where is the irrecoverable carbon?


A new paper published in Nature Sustainability mapped the irrecoveral carbon in earth's ecosystems. It shows how manageable, vulnerable and irrecoverable carbon are distributed among ecosystems. Petland, mangrove forests, old-growth forests are the most important- reserve of irrecoverable carbon. ““Irrecoverable carbon” refers to the vast stores of carbon in nature that are vulnerable to release from human activity and, if lost, could not be restored by 2050 — when the world must reach net-zero emissions to avoid the worst impacts of climate change..”. Here we are showing the percentage  of irrecoverable carbon density by ACP country in million tonnes. Source:  Noon, M.L., Goldstein, A., Ledezma, J.C. et al. Mapping the irrecoverable carbon in Earth’s ecosystems. Nat Sustain 5, 37–46 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-021-00803-6

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

https://api.biopama.org/api/climate/function/api_country_irrecoverablecarbon/
{"name":"Country", "show": true, "nameLocation": "middle", "nameGap": 80, "type":"category", "data":"isoa3_id"}
{"name":"% of irrecoverable carbon", "nameLocation": "middle", "nameGap": 80, "type":"value", "data":"perc_irr_c"}
{"name":"Percentage of irrecoverable carbon by country", "type":"bar", "bp_count":"Percentage of irrecoverable carbon by country", "data":"perc_irr_c"}
Descending
No
REST
4
Natural Breaks (Jenks)
sequential-3