Study  |  03/02/2026

Mitigating Climate Change – Forests Can Do More Than Just Absorb Emissions

All too often, forests are reduced to a single figure: the amount of CO₂ they store. However, a new review in Science, to which the Net Zero Lab contributed, shows that forests do much more than that. They help mitigate climate change by cooling the local environment, regulating water cycles, and improving human health and well-being. The effects vary depending on the environmental context, with important implications for forest management and climate adaptation strategies.

Infographic focusing on the multiple functions of forests. On the left, trees with extensive roots illustrate processes such as precipitation, evaporation, soil moisture, surface runoff, and infiltration. Arrows and labels indicate relationships between cloud formation, albedo effects, and the water cycle. On the right, buildings are shown, including a hospital marked with a red cross, referencing health aspects. A person is walking on a path. The graphic highlights that forests provide ecological and societal functions beyond CO2 storage.
Biophysical processes influenced by forests and their impacts on human well-being (Reek et al. 2026, 670).

More Than Carbon: Forests as Climate Regulators


Forests play a central role in climate mitigation, but their contribution extends far beyond carbon sequestration. The review highlights that focusing solely on carbon storage risks underestimating the broader climate services forests provide. By interacting with the atmosphere, land surface, and hydrological systems, forests influence local and regional climates in multiple, interconnected ways. These effects can complement or, in some contexts, even outweigh their role as carbon sinks – particularly over shorter timescales relevant for adaptation planning.


Cooling the Atmosphere: Temperature Effects


One of the most immediate benefits of forests is their ability to regulate temperature. Through shading and evapotranspiration, forests reduce surface and air temperatures, especially during heat extremes. This cooling effect can be particularly pronounced in temperate and tropical regions, where dense vegetation enhances moisture exchange with the atmosphere. In contrast, in high-latitude regions, darker forest canopies may absorb more solar radiation than snow-covered open land, potentially leading to localized warming. These contrasting effects underscore that the climate benefits of forests are not uniform, but depend strongly on geographic and seasonal context.


Regulating Water Cycles: Hydrological Impacts


Forests are also key actors in the global water cycle. By facilitating evapotranspiration, they contribute to cloud formation and precipitation patterns, both locally and downwind. This can stabilize regional climates and reduce the risk of drought. At the same time, forests influence soil moisture, groundwater recharge, and runoff dynamics, thereby reducing flood risks in some contexts. However, these hydrological effects are complex and vary with forest type, management practices, and climate zone. The review emphasizes that understanding these dynamics is essential for designing effective land-use and climate policies.


Enhancing Human Well-Being


Beyond physical climate processes, forests deliver significant benefits for human health and well-being. By moderating temperatures, they reduce heat stress in urban and rural areas alike. Improved air quality, recreational opportunities, and psychological benefits further enhance their societal value. These co-benefits are particularly relevant in densely populated regions, where even small changes in local climate conditions can have large impacts on public health and quality of life.


Implications for Policy and Forest Management


The findings carry important implications for climate policy and land management. A narrow focus on carbon accounting may lead to suboptimal decisions, such as prioritizing tree planting in regions where it could reduce surface albedo or strain water resources. Instead, policies should adopt a more integrated perspective that accounts for the full range of forest-climate interactions. This includes tailoring forest management strategies to local environmental conditions, balancing carbon storage with temperature and water regulation, and explicitly considering societal co-benefits. Incorporating these multiple dimensions into climate models and decision-making frameworks can improve the effectiveness of both mitigation and adaptation efforts.


Ultimately, the review calls for a shift in how forests are valued in climate strategies. Recognizing their multifunctional role not only strengthens the scientific basis for policy but also highlights their broader contribution to resilient and sustainable societies.


Go directly to the publication:
Reek, Josephine Elena; Zohner, Constantin M.; Reuben Smith, Gabriel; Cook-Patton, Susan C.; Frenne, Pieter De; Probst, Benedict; D’Odorico, Paolo (2026).
More Than Mitigation: The Role of Forests in Climate Adaptation, Science, 391 (6786), 669–678.