Offsetting fossil fuel reserves by planting trees is not a viable strategy, analysis finds

Stephanie Baum
scientific editor

Robert Egan
associate editor

New forests larger than the land area of North America would need to be planted to offset the potential carbon dioxide emissions from the fossil fuel reserves currently held by the world's 200 largest fossil fuel companies.
The finding comes from an analysis in Communications Earth & Environment, which also suggests that most of the companies would have a negative market valuation if the cost to offset their entire reserves was deducted from their current valuation.
Future emissions scenarios usually include both a reduction in carbon dioxide emissions and some offsetting of these emissions. Offsetting is necessary, as most scenarios assume that during the transition to clean energy there will be some use of the 182 billion tons of carbon currently held in the reserves of fossil fuel companies. Afforestation鈥攑lanting trees to create new areas of forest鈥攊s often proposed as an offset solution because of the low cost. However, the practicality of afforestation for widespread offsetting is currently unclear.
Researcher Alain Naef and colleagues assessed the viability of using afforestation to offset the total potential emissions from the current reserves of the world's 200 largest fossil fuel companies by 2050. They found that to offset the existing reserves, afforestation would be needed over an area greater than 24.75 million square kilometers鈥攍arger than the continent of North America. Such a large area could only be converted to forest by displacing existing communities and farmland, and disrupting existing essential natural habitats.
The authors also estimated the "net environmental valuation" of the studied companies. They defined this as the financial value of a company if the cost to offset the potential emissions from their existing fossil fuel reserves was deducted from their current market valuation. The authors found that at the 2022 average European emissions offset cost of US $83 per ton of carbon dioxide, 95% of the companies would have a negative net environmental valuation.
The authors conclude that while their analysis has several simplifications, the results show that it would be more economically profitable for companies to stop extracting fossil fuels than to extract and offset them, and that afforestation is not a viable method for offsetting all carbon dioxide emissions.
More information: Alain Naef, Carbon offsetting of fossil fuel emissions through afforestation is limited by financial viability and spatial requirements, Communications Earth & Environment (2025). .
Journal information: Communications Earth & Environment
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