...going to the original question of the thread, a search engine will lead you directly to a number of simple and clear definitions of what is meant by net zero
Looking back, it still seems to me that my 'original' question' was clear enough but, like eric, you seem to have interpreted my question as being about the definition of 'net zero', so I have to wonder if I perhaps wasn't actually as clear as I thought I had been!
The chosen definition of "net zero" is obviously an important issue, not the least because it might exclude some actual 'emissions' (e.g. 'unavoidable' ones - as below). However, regardless of that issue, my actual question was, given that total elimination of literally all 'emissions' of CO
2 into the atmosphere could obviously never be achieved, what was 'on the other side of the equation' other than 'planting trees and capturing/storing carbon'.
Since you have provided links to a couple of things .....
I'm familiar with that document but, unless I'm missing something, it does nothing to provide a definition of "net zero" beyond a fairly literal meaning of the term. The initial chapter with the promising-sounding title of "What is net zero and why do we need to act" merely says:
The science could not be clearer: by the middle of this century the world has to reduce emissions to as close to zero as possible, with the small amount of remaining emissions absorbed through natural carbon sinks like forests, and new technologies like carbon capture. If we can achieve this, global emissions of greenhouse gases will be ‘net zero’.
The main problem there being that it leaves the reader having to decide what exactly is meant by 'emmisions'.
This one starts off much the same as the government one, initially saying ....
We’ve all heard the term net zero, but what exactly does it mean? Put simply, net zero refers to the balance between the amount of greenhouse gas produced and the amount removed from the atmosphere. We reach net zero when the amount we add is no more than the amount taken away.
The words are different, but the meaning of "the amount of greenhouse gas produced" is as vague as the "emissions" of the government document.
However, at the end of the page, it addresses this issue to some extent, when it says (with my emboldening) :
Real zero would mean stopping all emissions, which isn’t realistically attainable across all sectors of our lives and industry. Even with best efforts to reduce them, there will still be some emissions.
Net zero looks at emissions overall, allowing for the removal of any unavoidable emissions, such as those from aviation or manufacturing. Removing greenhouse gases could be via nature, as trees take CO2 from the atmosphere, or through new technology or changing industrial processes.
This seems very confusing (at least to me). I initially thought (and still wonder) whether it was a typo, and that they meant "
avoidable emissions" (since it would seem strange to suggest that emissions from aviation and manufacturing were "unavoidable"), but then I saw the commas around the middle clause, and therefore wondered if they perhaps meant:
"Net zero looks at emissions overall, such as those from aviation or manufacturing (allowing for the removal of any unavoidable emissions)"
... but, even then, their "overall" would seem confusing (to me)!
Whatever, whoever wrote all that doesn't seem to understand the meaning of "net". "Net" surely means "net", and has no implications as regards whether one is talking about avoidable or unavoidable emissions, or both? The 'net' emission is surely the difference between the amount put into the atmosphere and the amount taken out of it, and that remains the case whether one is talking about avoidable emissions, unavoidable emissions or both?
Of particular relevance is the fact that if it is our hope that we will one day achieve a situation in which atmospheric CO
2 does not increase any further (or even declines) then it surely will be necessary that
true total 'emission' (both avoidable and unavoidable) must become the same (or less) than the total amount removed from the atmosphere (i.e.
true (overall) 'net emissions' must become zero or negative), isn't it?
[ In passing, everyone seems to talk about trees as if they were the main natural remover of CO
2 from the atmosphere, but I thought it was the case that we now believe than algae in the oceans are more important biological removers of CO
2 from (and 'putters' of oxygen into) the atmosphere, and also that geological removal of CO
2 and dissolution of CO
2 in the oceans are also major factors? ]
Kind Regards, John