Carbon emissions from logging would be the third highest emitting sector of Canada’s economy, if the federal government reported them out separately, according to a new report from groups including Nature Canada.

  • wise_pancake@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    I read the article and I’m confused

    Why are emissions based on the land and not the volume of lumber produced vs the number of trees replanted?

    If I cut a tree down, and turn it into furniture or build a house that my family uses for a generation, is that whole log a ghg emission?

    Why should we report forest fires as emissions? It would dwarf many industries that we should improve, and turn the measure into a cudgel to beat us with instead of a tool.

    Obviously forest management is an issue, but their emissions were like 5x the rest of all our emissions combined. If you add that you everyone will go “wow, Canadians are the biggest polluters on the planet, why should my country bother when they’re so awful”. It doesn’t help anything.

    The causes of the fire aren’t clear, last year was the hottest year on record, it’s kind of pinning all the blame on Canada despite warming being caused by all countries.

    I’m all for doing better, but I just feel more confused.

  • Troy@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    No problem. We will solve our housing crisis by building everything out of concrete then – an even higher emitter.

  • Kaboom@reddthat.com
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    2 months ago

    So what I’m hearing is “We should move logging to China so we can pollute even more, and then pollute even more when we ship lumber across the Pacific”

    Is that about right?

    • Someone@lemmy.ca
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      2 months ago

      I’m not sure exactly what your point is, but we do ship a lot of raw logs across the Pacific right now. If China had good logs maybe Japan wouldn’t import them from BC.