
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Removing carbon dioxide from our atmosphere - and stopping it getting up there in the first place - is becoming increasingly urgent if we want to prevent catastrophic climate change. There are some seriously high tech machines being developed to try and tackle this problem, but could an equally powerful solution be found in the dirt under our feet? Prompted by New Zealand farmer and CrowdScience listener Kem, we dig deep to see how effectively plants and soils soak up CO2 from the air; and what that means for how we should farm the land around the world. And we visit a Scottish forest to find out how the ancient art of making charcoal is staging a comeback in the fight against climate change.
Presenter: Marnie Chesterton
(Photo: A young plant in soil, in the morning light. Credit: Getty Images)
By BBC World Service4.7
436436 ratings
Removing carbon dioxide from our atmosphere - and stopping it getting up there in the first place - is becoming increasingly urgent if we want to prevent catastrophic climate change. There are some seriously high tech machines being developed to try and tackle this problem, but could an equally powerful solution be found in the dirt under our feet? Prompted by New Zealand farmer and CrowdScience listener Kem, we dig deep to see how effectively plants and soils soak up CO2 from the air; and what that means for how we should farm the land around the world. And we visit a Scottish forest to find out how the ancient art of making charcoal is staging a comeback in the fight against climate change.
Presenter: Marnie Chesterton
(Photo: A young plant in soil, in the morning light. Credit: Getty Images)

854 Listeners

1,962 Listeners

603 Listeners

93 Listeners

348 Listeners

963 Listeners

406 Listeners

429 Listeners

767 Listeners

746 Listeners

231 Listeners

330 Listeners

362 Listeners

241 Listeners

116 Listeners

0 Listeners

1 Listeners

0 Listeners

6 Listeners

13 Listeners

4 Listeners

1 Listeners

36 Listeners

0 Listeners

3 Listeners