Jacobo Arango, an environmental biologist at the Tropical Forages Program at the Alliance of Bioversity and CIAT and an author of the mitigation chapter of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report released on April 4, 2022, said it was encouraging to see in the report that some countries are on track to meet their commitments, but unfortunately, the world is not on track to meet the 1.5-degree warming scenario.
"The agriculture and land-use sector (which includes forestry) has a really invigorating role with this IPCC report," he said. "It's not enough only to lower emissions, we also need to actively remove carbon from the atmosphere."
While the popular conception of carbon capture and storage is the injection of carbon dioxide gas deep underground, Arango says that deep-rooted plants, including those used in livestock grazing, could store carbon 2-3 meters underground as soil organic matter (soil carbon).
"If you use the right plants, with a long root system, they can transfer the carbon from the atmosphere into the deep soil layers," he said, "Instead of big fancy machines taking carbon out of the atmosphere and injecting it into rock formations, agriculture does that naturally with plants, along with higher food production and other environmental benefits, such as water and biodiversity conservation."