New Legislation Taps into Coasts’ Potential to Store Carbon Pollution

ԼƵ supports the introduction of the Blue Carbon for Our Planet Act.

WASHINGTON (January 13, 2020) – Today Rep. Suzanne Bonamici (D-OR) introduced the bipartisan , which will help the United States meet a goal of net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, by leveraging and enhancing the carbon storage benefits of coastal ecosystems.

“Coastal ecosystems like marshes, mangroves, and seagrasses not only provide important habitats for birds and other wildlife, but they also serve as important carbon sinks that will be critical in helping the U.S. meet its carbon reduction goals.,” said Dr. Karen Hyun, vice president for coastal conservation at the ԼƵ. “We can combat climate change while protecting the places that birds need today. Natural solutions that capture carbon dioxide are a win-win for coastal birds like Clapper Rails and Brown Pelicans.”

“The Act would also set a goal of protecting 30 percent of coastal habitats by 2030, which is a great start for safeguarding and improving these important places for birds and people.”

The bill would provide much-needed research and funding for federal agencies to gauge the potential for coastal ecosystems to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and store it in their stems, branches, leaves, roots, and soils. Coastal ecosystems are vulnerable to climate change and are disappearing quickly, putting both birds and people on the coast at risk of sea level rise and increasing storms and flooding.

ԼƵ’s recent report, Survival By Degrees: 389 Species on the Brink, found that two-thirds of North American birds are threatened with extinction by climate change if warming continues at its current pace. According to our research, limiting warming to 1.5 degree Celsius would give 76% of at-risk bird species in North America a significantly improved chance of survival. Capturing carbon through natural ecosystem functions is the most cost effective way to achieve the goal of net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.

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Contact: Rachel Guillory, rachel.guillory@audubon.org, 504.708.5873