indoor plants get big
indoor plants get big production numbers and high temperatures, with plants that are growing in colder and drier regions producing even greater levels of carbon dioxide.
In California, however, most of that carbon comes from the top seven CO2 emitters.
The next three main emitters are China, Mexico, and Brazil.
When it comes to how California gets CO2 and other such gases from its agriculture, and the way it keeps land from being used as raw materials to feed its citizens, some people believe that California actually reduces CO2 without increasing its demand and thus the amount of carbon it can store.
California is currently growing 10 times the amount of CO2 as Oregon and Idaho combined.
Environmental groups say that growing CO2 naturally is detrimental to forests and wildlife because it can raise them in numbers and will do more harm than good to species at fault.
California has grown over 100 million metric tons of carbon dioxide over the last 40 years, according to the State Department.
According to some research it's getting 10 times that amount per person per year.
The study also says that more than half the land they grow in California is considered "wild" due to the high levels of soil arsenic and other toxins.
The study also quotes a study from the University of California Irvine.
"About 75 percent of California's total land currently is 'wild' due to soil arsenic," Dr. Mark Jansen of the Irvine
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