Regeneration: The Big Picture

factories with emissions

Humans are impacting the environment at a rapid rate, and the Earth can’t keep up to reset the balance. In order to prevent irreversible damage, we must cut carbon emissions. The first step? Understanding the big picture.

The following is an excerpt from Grassroots Rising by Ronnie Cummins. It has been adapted for the web.


Prefer Audio?

Listen to the following excerpt from the audiobook of Grassroots Rising. It has been adapted for the web.


Let’s just start off with the big picture and try to make the math and the science as simple as possible.

Humans are emitting the equivalent of ten billion tons of carbon every year through burning fossil fuels and destructive agricultural and land use practices. These ten billion tons are going up into the already carbonsupersaturated atmosphere and into the oceans, heating up the average temperature on the planet and pushing us closer and closer to runaway global warming and climate catastrophe.

If we want to avoid climate chaos and survive, we the global grassroots must rise up and put an end to business as usual over the next decade and beyond. We must cut global emissions of carbon and other greenhouse gases (GHG) by approximately five billion tons, or 50 percent, over the next decade. At the same time, we must simultaneously start to draw down billions of tons of atmospheric carbon every year through regenerative food, farming, and land use practices, sequestering it in our soils, forests, and plants, reaching at least five billion tons of global carbon drawdown by 2030. This will bring us to net zero emissions by 2030, which is basically the bottom line for human survival. factory with smoke

For the next several decades beyond 2030, we must continue to draw down and sequester in our soils, forest, and plants approximately five to twenty billion tons of carbon per year, while producing little to no fossil fuel emissions whatsoever.

This will move us away from our current trajectory of climate catastrophe and put us on the regenerative path of restabilizing the climate and bringing atmospheric CO2 back to the safe levels that existed before the industrial revolution began around 1750. Different scientists define the “safe” level of CO2 in the atmosphere as either 350 ppm, 300 ppm, or 280 ppm, but everyone agrees that the most desirable level to avert climate disaster would be 280 ppm.

For reference purposes in this book, 1 ton of solid carbon is equal in weight to 3.67 tons of CO2 gas, while CO2e refers to all greenhouse gases including methane and nitrous oxide. CO2e is often referred to as the “carbon footprint” of burning fuels or releasing greenhouse gases through land disturbance or deforestation.

One part per million (1 ppm) of CO2 in the atmosphere is equal to 7.8 gigatons (Gt or billion tons) of CO2 or 2.125 Gt of solid carbon. Global atmospheric concentrations of CO2 reached 415 ppm in 2018, the highest level in millions of years, whereas safe levels are considered to be 280 to 350 ppm, the range that has existed since humans appeared on the planet.


Recommended Reads

Our History: A Look at Oil, Power, and War

CARBON CASCADES: How to Restore Earth’s Natural Balance

Read The Book

Grassroots Rising

A Call to Action on Climate, Farming, Food, and a Green New Deal

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