Persistent methane emissions from sectors like agriculture, coupled with growing controversies surrounding the integrity of carbon offsets, are creating increasingly complex dynamics for governments and corporations committed to achieving net-zero climate targets. While carbon dioxide removal (CDR) technologies have been heralded as pivotal tools to mitigate climate change, emerging scientific evidence challenges the traditional assumption that only permanent carbon storage methods can meaningfully contribute to climate goals. A recent groundbreaking study provides a nuanced perspective, unveiling a scientifically robust role for temporary carbon storage when applied to offset certain short-lived climate pollutants, fundamentally reshaping our understanding of climate mitigation strategies.
Carbon dioxide removal is widely acknowledged as essential for meeting the ambitious temperature stabilization objectives outlined in the Paris Agreement. Existing carbon removal techniques predominantly sequester carbon temporarily rather than permanently, prompting critical inquiries regarding the appropriate treatment of these approaches within climate policy frameworks and carbon trading markets. Historically, it has been accepted that temporary CDR cannot fully offset carbon dioxide emissions because CO₂ molecules can linger in the atmosphere for centuries or longer. This temporal mismatch between carbon sequestration duration and atmospheric carbon lifetime has cast doubt on the legitimacy of temporary removal solutions in comprehensive climate accounting.
The recent study, published in the esteemed journal Nature and conducted by an international team from institutions including IIASA, Peking University, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the University of Maryland, and France’s Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l’Environnement, introduces a physics-grounded framework that precisely delineates the utility of temporary carbon dioxide removal. Crucially, the research advances the concept that while temporary carbon storage cannot compensate for long-lived CO₂ emissions directly, it is uniquely suited to counterbalance the climatic impact of short-lived climate forcers such as methane (CH₄). Methane’s atmospheric lifetime of roughly a decade aligns more closely with the duration of temporary storage methods, enabling effective climate compensation when the two are conceptually paired.
Their findings demonstrate that temporary carbon removal methods—such as bioplastics with carbon storage spanning about two decades or durable wood construction materials storing carbon for up to a century—can meaningfully neutralize methane’s warming potential over compatible timeframes. For example, neutralizing the climate effect of just one kilogram of methane would require the removal and temporary sequestration of approximately 498 kilograms of CO₂ for 20 years or about 101 kilograms for 100 years. This quantifiable compensation relationship remains stable across various time horizons, underpinning its practical application within climate policy and carbon accounting systems.
Lead author Yue He of Peking University and a guest researcher at IIASA explains, “Our work tackles a fundamental question: if temporary carbon dioxide removal is inadequate to offset long-lived CO₂, what, then, can it validly offset? By creating a physics-based accounting framework, we identify scenarios where temporary carbon removal holds real, scientifically justified value in the climate mitigation landscape.” Their methodology leverages existing climate metrics already embedded in international protocols, including those used by the IPCC and UNFCCC, ensuring alignment with established reporting standards.
Coauthor Thomas Gasser, senior research scholar at IIASA, highlights that the study challenges the simplistic notion of treating all greenhouse gases or carbon removal techniques equivalently. “Greenhouse gases differ not only in their chemical natures but profoundly in their atmospheric lifetimes and radiative forcing characteristics,” he notes. “Similarly, carbon storage methods differ in duration and permanence. Recognizing these distinctions allows us to harness temporary carbon storage in a targeted manner that complements, rather than substitutes, emission cuts.”
This innovative research builds on prior scholarship that underscored the pitfalls of conflating permanent and temporary carbon removal as interchangeable strategies. Rather than viewing what temporary methods cannot do, this study strategically defines what they can do, introducing concrete compensation ratios to enable policymakers and inventory compilers to incorporate temporary carbon storage as a quantifiable and legitimate mitigation tool.
Keywan Riahi, IIASA’s Energy, Climate, and Environment Program Director and study coauthor, emphasizes the conceptual shift enabled by this research: “Attempting to fit temporary carbon removal into frameworks designed exclusively for permanent solutions risks skewing climate accounting and undermining genuine progress. Instead, our findings carve out a scientifically defensible niche for temporary storage, especially in sectors where emission reductions are challenging and short-lived gases dominate.”
One of the most profound implications of this research lies in its application to sectors like agriculture, where methane emissions from livestock, rice paddies, and manure decomposition are persistent and difficult to abate. Countries with substantial agricultural footprints such as New Zealand and Brazil face ongoing methane emissions that complicate their net-zero ambitions. The new accounting framework provides these nations with a scientifically robust mechanism to compensate for methane emissions by deploying temporary carbon removal strategies in parallel.
To operationalize this approach, the authors advocate for a “two-basket” climate accounting system that separately tracks long-lived and short-lived climate forcers, reflecting their fundamentally divergent atmospheric behaviors and climate impacts. Moreover, continuous methane emissions necessitate sustained, continuous deployment of temporary carbon removal to maintain net climate benefits, highlighting the importance of systemic and strategic implementation rather than sporadic measures.
While temporary carbon dioxide removal offers a promising complementary tool, the researchers underscore it must never be perceived as a replacement for direct emissions reductions where feasible. Reducing emissions at source remains the cornerstone of climate action, with temporary storage serving to address otherwise difficult-to-eliminate methane emissions that persistently challenge climate stabilization efforts.
This paradigm shift in the understanding and utilization of carbon removal technologies heralds new opportunities for refining climate mitigation policies and carbon markets. Scientifically validated frameworks, like the one presented here, promise to enhance credibility, transparency, and effectiveness in offsetting short-lived climate pollutants, thereby advancing global efforts in the urgent pursuit of net-zero futures.
Subject of Research: Temporary carbon dioxide removal techniques and their efficacy in offsetting short-lived climate forcers, specifically methane, within the context of climate mitigation strategies and policy frameworks.
Article Title: Temporary carbon dioxide removal to offset short-lived climate forcers.
News Publication Date: 27-May-2026
Web References:
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10607-3
References:
He, Y., Riahi, K., Gidden, M.J., Piao, S., Wang, T., & Gasser, T. (2026). Temporary carbon dioxide removal to offset short-lived climate forcers. Nature. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10607-3
Keywords: Carbon dioxide removal, temporary carbon storage, methane emissions, short-lived climate forcers, climate mitigation, net-zero, carbon accounting, climate policy, carbon offsets, agricultural methane, climate metrics, greenhouse gases

