Benefits of Trees
Today, the most important aspect of the urban forest is clearly energy
conservation and carbon dioxide absorption.
Studies show that hospital patients with window view of trees recovered
significantly faster and with fewer complications than comparable patients
without access to such views. Windbreak of trees has been found to reduce
residential heating costs 10-15%
Trees intercept rainfall and reduce run-off, thereby functioning like
retention/detention basins.
The psychological impact of trees on people's moods, emotions and enjoyment
of their surroundings may in fact be one of the greatest benefits urban
forests provide. Properly located and managed, trees can reduce the demand
for fossil energy through effects such as shading buildings to reduce air
conditioning demand, breaking winter winds to lower space heating needs,
preventing soil erosion to lower the amount of fertilizer needs and fossil
fuel that would be needed to produce necessary foods and fibre from higher
acreages of degraded soils, and sheltering wildlife in both winter and summer
to reduce stress. Urban Trees Reduce CO2(carbon dioxide).
Each healthy tree can reduce air borne dust particles by as much as 7,000
particles per litre of air, thus a healthy tree is a free standing air
conditioner and purifier. You need about 500 full-sized trees to absorb the
carbon dioxide produced by a typical car driven 12,000 miles/year Consumption
CO2 production from heating an average home:
- by oil - 11 tons/year;
- by natural gas - 7 tons/year;
- by hydroelectricity - zero;
- by wood - 12 tons/year.
CO2 from running:
- economy car - 12,000 miles (gas) = 6 tons
- heavy truck - 15,000 miles (diesel) = 26 tons
Trees can help reduce the greenhouse effect in two ways:
trees directly absorb CO2 - the primary greenhouse gas - from the atmosphere
during photosynthesis;
shade from trees can reduce air conditioning and energy use, which reduces
the amount of CO2 emitted by power plants.
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