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What is Carbon Sequestration

Claiming Identity Through Redefined Teaching in Construction Programs
Carbon sequestration removes CO2 from the atmosphere. In nature, this occurs during photosynthesis.
Published in Chapter:
Climate Change in the Built Environment: Addressing Future Climates in Buildings
Jeremy T. Gibberd (CSIR, South Africa)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-8452-0.ch006
Abstract
Despite a growing awareness of climate change, there is little evidence that this is being addressed in cities and built environments. Events such as flooding in Houston, USA; landslides in Free Town, Sierra Leone; and water shortages in La Paz, Bolivia and Cape Town in South Africa demonstrate that it is increasingly important that climate change is understood and addressed in built environments to ensure that they become more resilient. This chapter introduces climate change and outlines the implications of this for built environments. It describes measures that can be incorporated into built environments to enable them to adapt to projected climate changes. Understanding climate change and preparing for this by developing built environments that are more resilient will be an increasingly valuable and important skill. Reading this chapter will support the development and refinement of skills and knowledge in this area and it is an essential reference for built environment students and practitioners.
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More Results
Role of Microbes in Eco-Remediation of Perturbed Aquatic Ecosystem
Carbon sequestration is the process involved carbon capture and removal and long-term storage of atmospheric carbon dioxide or other forms of carbon in carbon sinks (such as oceans, forests or soils) through physical or biological processes, such as photosynthesis to either mitigate or defer global warming and avoid dangerous climate change.
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Wind Erosion, Climate Change, and Shelterbelts
Is when atmospheric carbon dioxide is taken up by trees, grasses, and other plants through photosynthesis and stored as carbon in biomass and soils.
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Green Charcoal: Developing Biodegradable Construction Materials for a Circular Economy
Described as the long-term storage of carbon dioxide or other forms of carbon to either mitigate or defer global warming and avoid dangerous climate change.
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Using Artificial Intelligence in Agroforestry as an Economic Solution for Carbon Recycling in Tanzania
Is the process of capturing carbon from the atmosphere and store it in the form of biomass or gas deposits underground.
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Soil Carbon Sequestration: An Alternative Option for Climate Change Mitigation
The process of capturing and storing atmospheric carbon from where it won’t be remitted again.
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