That was somewhat a tongue-in-cheek post, but in theory it could perform the function necessary. No need to haul great distances if warehousing is the end game. Drought can most definitely be a factor, but there are still plenty of areas of the earth that see substantial rainfall and have soil conditions to support. We are seeing climate change, no doubt, and with that is coming climate shift. Areas that formerly supported forestation may no longer, and other areas, my locality included, are beginning to see wetter summers. Clear cutting is generally a terrible idea, agreed, but thinking of a fast growing species (poplars/alders, willow, etc) which reach harvestable maturity in 5 to 8 years, clear cutting and rotation becomes a do-able strategy. With woody biomass being roughly 50% carbon (dry) by weight, there is clearly some potential.
I still think reducing consumption is going to have to be the clincher, though. With the politics of maintaining a robust economy, this is unlikely to happen on a scale that is palatable to policy makers and the money kings.
It is better to have enough ideas for some of them to be wrong, than to be always right by having no ideas at all.