this post was submitted on 11 Sep 2023
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Mildly Interesting
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I've got to ask, though—how is breathing CO2 pollution? Aren't we just taking in air, removing the oxygen, and exhaling the waste gases? Isn't there the same net CO2 afterwards?
Have I misunderstood something as simple as breathing? Please say no.
You haven't misunderstood it! You're just coupling cellular respiration with photosynthesis, which on the surface seems to balance to net zero -- 6 CO2 molecules and sunlight create 1 glucose molecule, and we break down 1 glucose molecule for energy and generate 6 CO2 molecules.
There's one big factor though which isn't immediately obvious, and that's the rate of reaction. The chemical equations say nothing about how many molecules are consumed per second. In order for the net CO2 to be zero, they'd need to consume and generate CO2, respectively, at the same rate, which isn't the case.
It's actually a really good thing, because photosynthesis happens faster. Plants are net negative CO2 because of that. What we'd need to complete this comparison now is how much CO2 a human generates by existing, and we can determine how many plants are needed per human to have the same net CO2.
Thank you! What a great explanation. I'm always amazed by how much cooler things are than I expect.
Please accept this lemmygold: 🥇
Glad I could help!
Correct, 100%. I was just going through the science. Targeting human respiration as a carbon source is an extremely absurd notion.