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Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry

 

Why do we grow the wrong trees in the wrong places? This paper investigates this through the REDD+ initiatives under the UNFCCC that advocated for planting trees in developing countries to cool down our global temperature. The intuition behind this initiative, that growing trees in the tropics are good for fighting climate change, was naturalized by mainstream climate science in the Global North. Yet, as biologists point out, trees especially in the tropics emit gases known as BVOCs that can further exacerbate global warming. In other words, planting an enormous number of inappropriate species of trees in the tropics can even hurt rather than help the earth. This is surprising: why, given the espoused scientific commitment to pluralism as well as the interdisciplinary and global nature of climate change, are some scientific perspectives, especially biologists from the Global South, not well integrated into mainstream climate science? I show that rendering the climate as a singular legible entity from a god’s eye view also erects structural barriers to more heterogenous scientific studies of local ecologies from being integrated. Moreover, because models of the climate are based on environmental assumptions and tools of the Global North, they struggle to incorporate knowledge where these assumptions do not hold – especially in the Global South, where trees are more likely to emit gases that can exacerbate climate change – leading to international policies that ironically harms, rather than helps, the planet. I illustrate these challenges to integrating knowledge on BVOCs into mainstream climate models based on 48 interviews with climate scientists in both the Global North and Global South, as well as fieldwork based in climate science labs in the U.S. and Thailand.

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Topic: CAS Seminar: Jittip Mongkolnchaiarunya
Time: May 21, 2024 03:00 PM London

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88161587298?pwd=U0I2ejRHTXROQmhiNHo2OTF6NE1kZz09

Meeting ID: 881 6158 7298
Passcode: 174484

Further information

Time:

21May
May 21st 2024
15:00 to 16:00

Venue:

Chemistry Dept, Unilever Lecture Theatre and Zoom

Speaker:

Jittip Mongkolnchaiarunya, The George Washington University

Series:

Centre for Atmospheric Science seminars, Chemistry Dept.