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Earth United States

Corporate Carbon Offset Company Accidentally Starts Devastating Wildfire (vice.com) 57

Dutch reforestation company Land Life started what has become a 35,000 acre forest fire in Spain earlier this week. From a report: The fire started in Bubierca, a province of Zaragoza, the capital of autonomous community Aragon, when a Land Life contractor planting trees accidentally set off sparks that ignited nearby plant life. "The fire started while one of our contractors was using a retro-spider excavator to prepare the soil to plant trees later this winter," Land Life said in a statement on Thursday. "The operators alerted the emergency services. The emergency teams are working non-stop to control the fire and have fortunately established the fire perimeter. Nonetheless, we are devastated by the latest estimate that the damage will be around 14,000 hectares, or roughly 35,000 acres."

"While a contractor was working on forest restoration in the area, a spark from one of the excavators started the fire," the company wrote in an earlier press release. Land Life is a carbon offsetting firm, which means that it plants trees to, in theory, make up for the carbon emissions of polluting industries. It's not clear how many acres Land Life has actually planted trees in -- one blog post suggested the company aimed to plant around 20,000 acres between 2020-2021. This forest fire has not likely wiped out the lion's share of Land Life's work, but it is also not the first forest fire caused by Land Life -- on June 20, it sparked another inferno that wiped out 20 hectares.

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Corporate Carbon Offset Company Accidentally Starts Devastating Wildfire

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  • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Friday July 22, 2022 @10:49AM (#62724532)

    They've done this twice, so they need to review their safety protocols, have fire suppression onsite and put damn spark arrestors on their heavy equipment!

    • They should hire some of Spain's many unemployed to plant trees the old fashioned way.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      So how much carbon credit did they send up in flames?

      If the offset company isn't actually offsetting anything, maybe it's time to dissolve it and get some competent people in.

    • by Iamthecheese ( 1264298 ) on Friday July 22, 2022 @11:23AM (#62724616)
      If they're sparking them off like it's the Fourth of July then yeah they should be more careful. But to be fair the whole idea of preventing wildfires is retarded. The only choice we have is less frequent and more devastating or more frequent and less devastating. No one is going through hectares of wild forest clearing out all the deadwood, and even that would only reduce the severity or frequency, not eliminate them altogether. If no human ever makes a spark then it will be a lightning strike, a pile of fermenting leaves, or some other freak accident.

      The best we can do is deliberately set fires when they'll be most easily recovered from.
      • Does that include the ass that throws a still-burning cigarette butt out of their car window into a dry, windy forest environment? Just asking if it should be included on the list. Lightning has a place there, but this one... Need to ask. ;) /h--I think.

      • Our Kirtland's Warbler only nest in young Jack Pine forests, and the Jack pines only release their seed after a forest fire, so we have annual controlled burns; which weren't always as controlled as they wanted. https://www.canr.msu.edu/news/... [msu.edu]

    • A lot of these offset programs are just scams so maybe they should just stop altogether.

      • A lot of these offset programs are just scams so maybe they should just stop altogether.

        he says in a thread talking about equipment which was in the process of being used to plant trees. How fucking tonedeaf are you.

        • That doesn't preclude it from being a scam. It's not like they necessarily don't do anything at all, it can be just fuckery with accounting or planting where it's not appropriate etc.

    • They've done this twice, so they need to review their safety protocols, have fire suppression onsite and put damn spark arrestors on their heavy equipment!

      Is this asking for donations for newer, safer equipment that they can't afford? Just askin'.

  • by Chris Mattern ( 191822 ) on Friday July 22, 2022 @10:57AM (#62724552)

    Does that make anybody else think of this? [thatmomentin.com]

    • Meh, that film was a waste of talent. "What is this Oootah?" and "Let the party begin!" were the only two memorable lines.

  • by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Friday July 22, 2022 @11:31AM (#62724630)

    Paying someone to do it on fallow land is

    A. Make-work

    B. Green indulgences

    C. A tax dodge

    D. All of the above

    • TIL Poe's Law works as well on the right as the left.
    • Paying someone to do it on fallow land is

      A. Make-work

      B. Green indulgences

      C. A tax dodge

      D. All of the above

      Why am I not surprise that the person claiming deforestation isn't a thing, that trees just happily plant themselves and that we shouldn't be putting any effort into restoring forests is a RightwingNutjob.

    • by js80 ( 1534197 )
      Trees do plant themselves but the question is, are they the trees you want? The answer is likely no as some of the first trees to invade can be invasive exotic species. So people planting fallow land with more desirable native species can give a needed head start in some cases.
      • If you intend to turn that land into a manicured park or plan on harvesting specific varieties of trees for lumber or resale as saplings, sure.

        If you're just checking boxes for carbon credits...let's just remember that some people want you to pay them carbon credits for *not* chopping down trees already growing on their land that they probably had no intention to chop down to begin with.

  • Wildfires don't actually cause an increase in net CO2 over a longer time period (years), they just release it all at once. Trees are just temporary carbon sequestration, and all that captured carbon gets released when the trees die and decompose. This is why you can't just solve global warming by planting a million trees...It might reduce the atmospheric CO2 temporarily, but itl'l eventually be re-released.

    • Trees have offspring, forests are self-replicating. If the forest doesn't die out, it should just keep eating more co2 when it loses some (much of that same compost, perhaps)? But yeah, I hear they say carbon capture won't do the trick by itself, something about a polar ice albedo threshold having been crossed. Maybe engineer silver trees..?
    • by decep ( 137319 )

      Except trees tend to self-perpetuate. One million trees could turn in to 5 million trees in 20 years.

      • That's just kicking the can down the road and actually letting the problem grow. If the goal is to remove CO2 that's been unnaturally reintroduced to the carbon cycle by our burning of fossil fuels, then we need something that will again sequester it for generations. An example of one such proposal is to embed it in deep-sea sediment.

      • trees tend to self-perpetuate. One million trees could turn in to 5 million trees in 20 years.

        If we had 20 years to wait, that would still not be enough trees to fix the excess carbon.

      • Except trees tend to self-perpetuate. One million trees could turn in to 5 million trees in 20 years.

        A tree does, a forest doesn't. One million becomes 5 million and then stays at 5 million unless as trees are unable to self-perpetuate when the space is fully saturated.

        The answer between the OP's extreme and yours lies in the middle. The centre of forests largely become CO2 neutral, the edges can often expand. But the principle is still correct, trees suck up a massive ton of CO2 but only initially it does eventually plateau.

        That said there are many other benefits to planting trees including soil health, e

    • by Z80a ( 971949 )

      You probably can if you cut the trees and use em to build things, then plant even more trees, rinse, repeat.
      Specially if you replace plastics with wood where possible and have a double whammy on the emissions.

    • Trees are just temporary carbon sequestration, and all that captured carbon gets released when the trees die and decompose.

      Not only that, but if the trees, branches, leaves, etc. decompose under water, the carbon they extracted from the atmosphere as CO2 is returned to it as Methane - a MUCH more powerful greenhouse gas for the 12 years or so it lasts in the atmosphere, on the average, until it degrades back to CO2.

    • Trees sequester carbon in soil as well as in themselves, so it's false to say that trees only provide temporary carbon sequestration, even with cycles of wildfires. It is true however that the bulk of the mass is above ground.

  • ... have you heard? :D
  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Friday July 22, 2022 @12:27PM (#62724750)

    How can you reforestate without first deforestating? I mean, those trees don't just grow in thin air, they need some space...

    • How can you reforestate without first deforestating? I mean, those trees don't just grow in thin air, they need some space...

      They grow in smoke.. thick air. I have proof.

    • How can you reforestate without first deforestating?

      Implying that we haven't been deforesting for centuries? Or do you think they were using an excavator to rip up the soil in the middle of a dense forest? Here's a thought: Maybe you should research more and shouldn't spout bullshit. The world would be a better place and we wouldn't produce CO2 wasting energy reading your proclamation of self ignorance.

      A tip for the future. Next time you think you're so much smarter than everyone else, chances are you don't have a clue about what is going on.

  • Turns out that money isn't the only thing they're burning.

  • They need drones, excavators, and whatever else except a shovel and a truckload of saplings. I guess the old school approach of throwing people at a low tech way of planting saplings is not investor friendly. Some people would even be willing to volunteer to do it for free in their spare time...

    Yes I get it, keeping the trees healthy and protected from wildlife is hard. But they can't even plant the things before messing it up.
    • They need drones, excavators, and whatever else except a shovel and a truckload of saplings.

      Yeah you're right, let's just plan to plant 20000 hectares in one year using shovels and saplings. Do you have 10000 slaves spare? Next you'll tell me you think that farming is done by people dragging a plough behind a horse.

      But they can't even plant the things before messing it up.

      A forest fire hardly messes things up. Trees largely survive, existing plants which have taken root regrow, and shit man did you know there are actual trees out there which can only germinate during a fire.

      The calamity here is the potential risk to life and livelihoods of people, not th

  • If Land Life is planting trees in such dry areas, then don't they have to water the new trees to be sure they can overcome transplant shock and not die? And if they have that water on hand, couldn't they apply some to the brush surrounding the work area to help prevent such accidents? And shouldn't they have learned enough from the first small fire to take steps to prevent it from happening again?

    • If Land Life is planting trees in such dry areas, then don't they have to water the new trees to be sure they can overcome transplant shock and not die?

      Not really. If you're putting in larger trees then you might have to water them in, but you don't have to keep watering them. You don't need equipment to install small trees, humans with shovels can do that just fine. QED they probably didn't have that much water on hand.

      And shouldn't they have learned enough from the first small fire to take steps to prevent it from happening again?

      Yes. It usually boils down to "don't operate machinery between 10 and 2 or when it is hot, dry, and windy". The Spanish typically take a nap then, but this project is run by the Dutch :)

    • by buckles ( 168018 )

      Yes, I thought it un-advisable to plant seedlings in a drought condition at temperatures above 35 C.
      These are not really trees that are being planted, nor saplings, but bare root seedlings which need consistent moisture.
      But the Dutch are leaders in horticulture.
       

      • They were preparing the soil for winter planting using a Spider excavator [pinterest.com]; I'm assuming Spain like most places is a lot wetter in the winter.

        • I'm assuming Spain like most places is a lot wetter in the winter.

          If by 'a lot wetter' you mean 'it rains for a couple of weeks in autumn and spring, and morning dew doesn't evaporate as fast', then yes.

          Otherwise, winters are extremely cold and dry everywhere except the north coast.

          • If by 'a lot wetter' you mean 'it rains for a couple of weeks in autumn and spring, and morning dew doesn't evaporate as fast', then yes.

            Otherwise, winters are extremely cold and dry everywhere except the north coast.

            Actually I was thinking as compared to the mid-summer draught in a country just north of the Sahara Desert.

  • What kind of excavator causes sparks? I have seen few in action and they do exhaust hot gases from burnt diesel but no sparks. Sounds to me like authorities should so after the manufacture.
    • by jaa101 ( 627731 )

      You dig rocks with steel implements and you'll get sparks. Even humans with picks and shovels do the same; if you've ever dug in dry, rocky soil, especially when the sun sets, you'd know. Large machinery makes this a bigger problem because the driver is too far away from the sparks to notice any resulting ignitions.

  • I wonder how much carbon they could have sequestered had they just used the efforts to clear up all the dead plant matter and stored it someplace, instead of letting it rot and release methane. Or catch fire.
  • by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Saturday July 23, 2022 @12:58AM (#62726432)
    Why can't we just have large algae farms? Algae is capable of creating snowball earths. You don't even need to use fresh water. Just seawater.

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