CobyRupert
Super Member
Good question!
As said above you have to define pollution. Carbon footprint? Atmospheric only? Particulate?
On one hand when you chip them you're not (immediately) releasing the carbon into the atmosphere like your are with a fire. The carbon is still stored in the wood, you're just putting that stick into a state where decomposition will occur sooner. However, you are adding carbon to the atmosphere/environment that was brought from underground to make that diesel (and all the carbon it took to get that gallon of diesel to you.)
Pine brings up an interesting point on decomposing producing CH4, perhaps making an argument that decomposing is more harmful (creates more greenhouse gases) than burning?
What might be missing from this discussion is how much of the carbon (or methane) from decomposing stays in the soil vs. how much goes into the atmosphere and balancing that against the amount of diesel used? :confused3:
Seems to me that bringing up lakes of oil from an underground storage to burn on the surface (i.e. adding carbon to the system) would be worse in the long run then the terrestrial (zero sum) circular systems of transformation (burning or letting it rot). (-This is where someone mentions volcanoes and sea vents.)
:2cents:
Doesn't the whole system hinge on sea plankton?
As said above you have to define pollution. Carbon footprint? Atmospheric only? Particulate?
On one hand when you chip them you're not (immediately) releasing the carbon into the atmosphere like your are with a fire. The carbon is still stored in the wood, you're just putting that stick into a state where decomposition will occur sooner. However, you are adding carbon to the atmosphere/environment that was brought from underground to make that diesel (and all the carbon it took to get that gallon of diesel to you.)
Pine brings up an interesting point on decomposing producing CH4, perhaps making an argument that decomposing is more harmful (creates more greenhouse gases) than burning?
What might be missing from this discussion is how much of the carbon (or methane) from decomposing stays in the soil vs. how much goes into the atmosphere and balancing that against the amount of diesel used? :confused3:
Seems to me that bringing up lakes of oil from an underground storage to burn on the surface (i.e. adding carbon to the system) would be worse in the long run then the terrestrial (zero sum) circular systems of transformation (burning or letting it rot). (-This is where someone mentions volcanoes and sea vents.)
:2cents:
Doesn't the whole system hinge on sea plankton?