We all know that trees fight climate change by breathing in carbon dioxide and breathing out oxygen. But what about the ocean and coastal ecosystems -- how do they impact the climate crisis?
On this episode of Radio Davos we hear from an expert who has spent decades wading into Colombian swamps to extract soil samples from mangrove forests to learn more about carbon sequestration.
“In the case of mangroves, sediments can account for between 50 and 90% of the total carbon. That is the difference between mangroves and terrestrial forests,” says María Claudia Díazgranados Cadelo of Conservation International.
“When mangroves are destroyed or degraded the carbon stocks that took millennia to accumulate and are located in these sediments, they are released in a matter of years, turning these important carbon sinks Into a significant carbon source.”
We also hear from a man who has been swimming in freezing arctic waters since 2003 to shine a spotlight on how global warming is already changing our world.
“When I did my first swim in the arctic, the water was 3 degrees centigrade. I went back there 12 years later and the water was no longer 3 degrees, it was 10 degrees centigrade,” says Lewis Pugh.
“I've been in the ice for the last 18 years and I'm seeing the changes and I'm feeling them. Every single degree of water temperature which goes up or goes down has a huge difference.”
Peter Thomson, the United Nations’ Special Envoy for the Ocean and and Co-Chair of Friends of Ocean Action, calls on global leaders at COP26 to "deliver us from this nightmare".
“From the ocean's perspective, everything is connected. Think of it as one bathtub. So, what's flowing off the Greenland ice sheet is causing a rising sea level in an atoll republic. If you're burning coal to get your electricity, you're contributing to the drowning of an age-old island culture.”
Tania Strauss, Iliass El Fali and Pedro Gomez
2024年11月27日