EcoWatch
Facebook 558k Twitter 222k Instagram 52k Subscribe Subscribe
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Conservation
  • Food + Agriculture
  • Renewables
  • Oceans
  • Policy
  • Insights + Opinion
  • Go Solar Today
      • Top Companies By State
        • California Solar Companies
        • Texas Solar Companies
        • New York Solar Companies
        • Florida Solar Companies
        • See All States
      • Top Incentives By State
        • California Solar Incentives
        • Texas Solar Incentives
        • New York Solar Incentives
        • Florida Solar Incentives
        • See All States
      • Solar Panel Costs By State
        • Solar Panel Costs in California
        • Solar Panel Costs in Texas
        • Solar Panel Costs in New York
        • Solar Panel Costs in Florida
        • See All States
      • Value of Solar by State
        • Is Solar Worth It In California?
        • Is Solar Worth It in Texas?
        • Is Solar Worth It New York?
        • Is Solar Worth It In Florida?
        • See All States
      • Company Reviews
        • Tesla Solar Review
        • Sunrun Solar Review
        • SunPower Solar Review
        • Vivint Solar Review
        • See All Companies
      • Common Solar Questions
        • Can You Get Free Solar Panels?
        • Does Solar Increase Home Value?
        • What’re The Best Solar Batteries?
        • Can You Finance Solar?
        • Where To Buy Solar Panels?
        • Payback On Solar Panels?
      • Solar Resources
        • Interactive Solar Calculator
        • Federal Solar Tax Credit
        • Best Solar Panels For Most Homes
        • Tesla Solar Roof Review
        • Cheapest Solar Panels
      • Companies Compared
        • SunPower vs Tesla Solar
        • SunRun vs Tesla Solar
        • SunRun vs SunPower
        • SunPower vs Momentum Solar
        • SunPower vs ADT Solar
EcoWatch
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Conservation
  • Food + Agriculture
  • Renewables
  • Oceans
  • Policy
  • Insights + Opinion
  • Go Solar Today
    • Go Solar Today
    • Top Companies By State
      • California Solar Companies
      • Texas Solar Companies
      • New York Solar Companies
      • Florida Solar Companies
      • See All States
    • Top Incentives By State
      • California Solar Incentives
      • Texas Solar Incentives
      • New York Solar Incentives
      • Florida Solar Incentives
      • See All States
    • Solar Panel Costs By State
      • Solar Panel Costs in California
      • Solar Panel Costs in Texas
      • Solar Panel Costs in New York
      • Solar Panel Costs in Florida
      • See All States
    • Value of Solar by State
      • Is Solar Worth It In California?
      • Is Solar Worth It in Texas?
      • Is Solar Worth It New York?
      • Is Solar Worth It In Florida?
      • See All States
    • Company Reviews
      • Tesla Solar Review
      • Sunrun Solar Review
      • SunPower Solar Review
      • Vivint Solar Review
      • See All Companies
    • Common Solar Questions
      • Can You Get Free Solar Panels?
      • Does Solar Increase Home Value?
      • What’re The Best Solar Batteries?
      • Can You Finance Solar?
      • Where To Buy Solar Panels?
      • Payback On Solar Panels?
    • Solar Resources
      • Interactive Solar Calculator
      • Federal Solar Tax Credit
      • Best Solar Panels For Most Homes
      • Tesla Solar Roof Review
      • Cheapest Solar Panels
    • Companies Compared
      • SunPower vs Tesla Solar
      • SunRun vs Tesla Solar
      • SunRun vs SunPower
      • SunPower vs Momentum Solar
      • SunPower vs ADT Solar

The best of EcoWatch right in your inbox. Sign up for our email newsletter!

    • About EcoWatch
    • Contact EcoWatch
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Learn About Solar Energy
    Facebook 558k Twitter 222k Instagram 52k
    EcoWatch
    • About EcoWatch
    • Contact EcoWatch
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Learn About Solar Energy
    Facebook 558k Twitter 222k Instagram 52k
    Home Climate

    Earth’s Land and Trees Absorbed Almost No Net Carbon in 2023

    By: Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
    Published: October 14, 2024
    Facebook icon Twitter icon Pinterest icon Email icon
    Aerial drone view of the Dutch Slough Restoration Project in Oakley, California, more than halfway complete on Aug. 1, 2023. The project is designed to create a powerful carbon sink while restoring wetlands to bring back native wildlife.
    The Dutch Slough Restoration Project in Oakley, California was more than halfway completed on Aug. 1, 2023. The project is designed to create a powerful carbon sink while restoring wetlands to bring back native wildlife. Jane Tyska / Bay Area News Group
    Why you can trust us

    Founded in 2005 as an Ohio-based environmental newspaper, EcoWatch is a digital platform dedicated to publishing quality, science-based content on environmental issues, causes, and solutions.

    Facebook icon Twitter icon Pinterest icon Email icon

    Earth’s land-based carbon sinks — forests, wetlands, grasslands and soil — are essential for absorbing atmospheric carbon dioxide, regulating the planet’s temperature and mitigating climate change.

    A preliminary report shows that last year — the hottest ever recorded — almost no net carbon was absorbed by land. This means the world’s terrestrial carbon sinks temporarily collapsed, reported The Guardian.

    “We’re seeing cracks in the resilience of the Earth’s systems. We’re seeing massive cracks on land – terrestrial ecosystems are losing their carbon store and carbon uptake capacity, but the oceans are also showing signs of instability,” said Johan Rockström, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research director, at a New York Climate Week event last month, as The Guardian reported. “Nature has so far balanced our abuse. This is coming to an end.”

    The terrestrial breakdown of carbon absorption last year could be provisional and due to the excessive drought and wildfires caused by global heating putting pressure on carbon sinks.

    Humans produced a record 41.2 billion tons of carbon pollution in 2023. Without the planet’s carbon sinks performing their essential ecosystem services at a normal rate, reaching net zero will not be possible.

    A fast-paced collapse of terrestrial carbon sinks has not been taken into account in most climate models.

    “This stressed planet has been silently helping us and allowing us to shove our debt under the carpet thanks to biodiversity,” Rockström said. “We are lulled into a comfort zone – we cannot really see the crisis.”

    The Congo basin is the one major tropical rainforest in the world that is still a strong carbon sink, removing more than is released back into the atmosphere.

    Soil is second only to oceans as Earth’s largest active carbon store, but its collective emissions are predicted to increase by up to 40 percent by 2100 if they keep up at their current rate. The climate crisis is causing soils to become drier and microbes to break them down more quickly.

    Oceans remain the biggest carbon sink on Earth — absorbing 90 percent of fossil fuel warming in recent decades — which has led to a fast rise in sea surface temperatures. Studies have found indications that this pressure has weakened the ocean as a carbon sink.

    Researchers say carbon flow through the ocean and land is still in great part a mystery, as opposed to actual human emissions, which have become increasingly easy to measure.

    “Overall, models agreed that both the land sink and the ocean sink are going to decrease in the future as a result of climate change. But there’s a question of how quickly that will happen. The models tend to show this happening rather slowly over the next 100 years or so,” says professor Andrew Watson, head of the marine and atmospheric science group at Exeter University, as reported by The Guardian. “This might happen a lot quicker. Climate scientists [are] worried about climate change not because of the things that are in the models but the knowledge that the models are missing certain things.”

    Scientists have said that many Earth systems models include some of global heating’s effects on the planet — such as the slowing of ocean currents and the destruction of the Amazon rainforest — but other more recent events have yet to be incorporated.

    “None of these models have factored in losses like extreme factors which have been observed, such as the wildfires in Canada last year that amounted to six months of US fossil emissions. Two years before, we wrote a paper that found that Siberia also lost the same amount of carbon,” said Philippe Ciais, one of the new paper’s authors and a French Laboratory of Climate and Environmental Sciences researcher, as The Guardian reported. “Another process which is absent from the climate models is the basic fact that trees die from drought. This is observed and none of the models have drought-induced mortality in their representation of the land sink. The fact that the models are lacking these factors probably makes them too optimistic.”

    More From EcoWatch
    • The Best Solar Generators
    • What Is the Federal Solar Tax Credit (ITC)?
    • Pros and Cons of Solar Energy

    The planet’s ability to absorb carbon weakening even moderately would make much steeper reductions in greenhouse gas emissions necessary to get to net zero.

    “We shouldn’t rely on natural forests to do the job. We really, really have to tackle the big issue: fossil fuel emissions across all sectors,” said Exeter University professor Pierre Friedlingstein, who oversees the yearly calculations of the Global Carbon Budget, as reported by The Guardian. “We can’t just assume that we have forests and the forest will remove some CO2, because it’s not going to work in the long term.”

    Subscribe to get exclusive updates in our daily newsletter!

      By signing up, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, and to receive electronic communications from EcoWatch Media Group, which may include marketing promotions, advertisements and sponsored content.

      Cristen Hemingway Jaynes

      Cristen is a writer of fiction and nonfiction. She holds a JD and an Ocean & Coastal Law Certificate from University of Oregon School of Law and an MA in Creative Writing from Birkbeck, University of London. She is the author of the short story collection The Smallest of Entryways, as well as the travel biography, Ernest’s Way: An International Journey Through Hemingway’s Life.
      Facebook icon Twitter icon Pinterest icon Email icon

      Read More

      Iroquois Valley: Investing in Farmers Transitioning to Organic, Regenerative Agriculture
      As more people are starting to realize — and as
      By Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
      Global Hunger Rises for 6th Consecutive Year in a ‘World Dangerously off Course’: UN Report
      Acute global food insecurity rose for the sixth year in
      By Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
      Low River Levels in UK Raise Concerns of Drought
      Extremely low river levels in the UK recently have experts
      By Paige Bennett

      Subscribe to get exclusive updates in our daily newsletter!

        By signing up, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, and to receive electronic communications from EcoWatch Media Group, which may include marketing promotions, advertisements and sponsored content.

        Latest Articles

        • Iroquois Valley: Investing in Farmers Transitioning to Organic, Regenerative Agriculture
          by Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
          May 16, 2025
        • Global Hunger Rises for 6th Consecutive Year in a ‘World Dangerously off Course’: UN Report
          by Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
          May 16, 2025
        • Low River Levels in UK Raise Concerns of Drought
          by Paige Bennett
          May 16, 2025
        • Record Number of River Barriers Removed in Europe in 2024: Report
          by Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
          May 16, 2025
        • China’s CO2 Emissions Fall for the First Time Despite Rising Power Demand, Signaling Possible Peak
          by Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
          May 16, 2025
        • New Project Will Reintroduce Elk to UK for the First Time in 3,000 Years
          by Paige Bennett
          May 15, 2025
        • Protecting the World’s Seagrass Meadows Could Prevent Billions in Damages, New Research Suggests
          by Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
          May 15, 2025
        • European Companies Increasingly Support Strong Climate Action: Report
          by Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
          May 15, 2025
        EcoWatch

        The best of EcoWatch right in your inbox. Sign up for our email newsletter!

          • Climate Climate
          • Animals Animals
          • Health + Wellness Health + Wellness
          • Insights + Opinion Insights + Opinion
          • Adventure Adventure
          • Oceans Oceans
          • Business Business
          • Solar Solar
          • About EcoWatch
          • Contact EcoWatch
          • EcoWatch Reviews
          • Terms of Use
          • Privacy Policy
          • Learn About Solar Energy
          • Learn About Deregulated Energy
          • EcoWatch UK
          Follow Us
          Facebook 558k
          Twitter 222k
          Instagram 52k
          Subscribe Subscribe

          Experts for a healthier planet and life.

          Mentioned by:
          Learn more
          • Privacy Policy
          • Terms of Use
          • Cookie Preferences
          • Do Not Sell My Information
          © 2025 EcoWatch. All Rights Reserved.

          Advertiser Disclosure

          Our editorial team is committed to creating independent and objective content focused on helping our readers make informed decisions. To help support these efforts we receive compensation from companies that advertise with us.

          The compensation we receive from these companies may impact how and where products appear on this site. This compensation does not influence the recommendations or advice our editorial team provides within our content. We do not include all companies, products or offers that may be available.