Dip in UK woodland’s ability to capture CO2 as felled trees not replaced
by Severin Carrell Scotland editor from Environment | The Guardian on (#61QAR)
While planting rates have risen in Scotland, carbon capture figures overall have fallen every year since 2009, official data shows
The amount of carbon dioxide captured by the UK's forests has fallen by millions of tonnes and will remain at historically low rates for over a decade, because of a failure to quickly replace old forest stocks.
Official data shows the amount of CO2 absorbed annually by trees in the UK peaked at just under 20m tonnes in 2009, but has fallen every year since. Millions of mature conifers have been felled but not replaced, reducing the carbon they capture and store.
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