
Heat-tolerant, fast-growing species such as eucalyptus could be planted, with drip irrigation — using plastic tubing to deliver water to roots — to minimise evaporation. Such forests could cool the Sahara by up to eight degrees Celsius and return rain to the region, they say. Clouds would also help to reflect the sun's rays. The fast-growing trees could absorb eight billion tonnes of carbon dioxide per year — the amount emitted from burning fossil fuels and forests today — and could do so for decades.
The price tag of US$2 trillion a year is not low. But Ornstein and colleagues say that after several decades the forests would provide a sustainable source of firewood, making them carbon neutral….
Southern edge of the Sahara Desert outside Agadez, Niger, 1997. Shot by Dan Lundberg, Wikimedia Commons via Flickr, under Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.0 License
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