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Greenhouse Gasses

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Title: Greenhouse Gasses


1
Greenhouse Gasses in order of importance
  • water vapor
  • carbon dioxide
  • methane
  • nitrous oxide
  • ozone
  • CFCs

2
Changes in greenhouse gas concentrations
  • Historical variations can be tracked via analysis
    of ice cores
  • Ice core - a core sample (a cylindrical section
    of a naturally occurring medium consistent enough
    to hold a layered structure) from the
    accumulation of snow and ice over many years that
    have re-crystallized and have trapped air bubbles
    from previous time periods.
  • The composition of these ice cores provides a
    picture of the climate at the time.
  • Record for over 800,000 years

Gas Preindustrial Level
Current Level Increase since 1750 Carbon
dioxide 280 ppm 387ppm
104 ppm Methane
700 ppb 1,745 ppb
1,045 ppb Nitrous oxide 270 ppb
314 ppb 44 ppb CFC-12
0
533 ppt 533 ppt
3
What do the ice cores tell us?
  • Natural variations occur in the greenhouse gas
    concentrations

4
Post industrial revolution
5
Man made sources of greenhouse gasses
  • Also called Anthropogenic, which designates an
    effect or object resulting from human activity
  • burning of fossil fuels and deforestation
    leading to higher carbon dioxide concentrations.
  • Account for one third of total anthropogenic CO2
    emissions.
  • livestock enteric fermentation and manure
    management, paddy rice farming, land use and
    wetland changes, pipeline losses, and covered
    vented landfill emissions leading to higher
    methane atmospheric concentrations. Many of the
    newer style fully vented septic systems that
    enhance and target the fermentation process also
    are sources of atmospheric methane.
  • use of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) in
    refrigeration systems, and use of CFCs and halons
    in fire suppression systems and manufacturing
    processes.
  • agricultural activities, including the use of
    fertilizers, that lead to higher nitrous oxide
    (N2O) concentrations.

6
What are we seeing?
  • Since 1860-1900, global surface temperatures have
    increased by 1.35 F
  • Urban heat island effect only accounts for 0.02 C
    rise
  • Since 1979 land T have increased twice as fast as
    ocean Temperatures
  • Temperatures on the lower troposphere have have
    increased by 0.62 between 1979 and 2000.

7
Hold on, could it be the sun?
  • No overall increase in solar brightness in over
    1000 years
  • Solar cycles do cause small variations in
    brightness, but not enough to account for what
    has been seen
  • No its not the sun

8
Feedback-making the problem worse (or better)
  • Positive feedback-when the warming induces
    further warming
  • Negative feedback when the warming induces a
    cooling

9
Sources of Feed back
  • Positive
  • Water vapor
  • Clouds
  • Ice albedo
  • Arctic methane release
  • Reduced carbon dioxide absorption in the oceans
  • Negative
  • Lapse rate

10
Negative feedback
  • Lapse Rate
  • Increased heating means increased IR emission
  • Global warming reduces the rate of Temperature
    decrease with height, which means more long
    wavelength radiation will be emitted by the upper
    atmosphere
  • This will weaken the greenhouse effect

11
Positive feedback
  • Water vapor
  • Warming increases the amount of water vapor in
    the atmosphere, which increases the warming since
    water vapor is also a greenhouse gas
  • Clouds
  • Act as a blanket, reflect IR radiation downward
    toward the surface
  • Ice albedo
  • Melting ice reveals land and water, both reflect
    less light than ice-more warmth is absorbed
    increasing warming
  • Arctic methane release
  • Warming releases sources of carbon dioxide
  • Reduce carbon dioxide absorption in oceans
  • Warm waters favor the growth of plankton rather
    than diatoms-diatoms are more efficient carbon
    dioxide absorbers

12
Global dimming
  • An effect that has been counteracting some of
    global warming from about 1960 forward
  • Aerosols produced by volcanoes and pollutants
    such as sulfur dioxide reflect incoming sunlight
  • Soot suspended in the atmosphere, it can absorb
    solar radiation and heat the atmosphere, but cool
    the surface

13
What are we seeing
  • Besides the increases in Temperature
  • Worlds glaciers are melting
  • Arctic sea ice is reducing in both extent ( 9
    reduction in area per decade) and thickness
    (15-40 in thickness in the last 30 years)
  • Ocean levels are rising-both due to melting of
    Antarctic ice and thermal expansion of sea water
  • Longer growing seasons
  • Thawing of permafrost in Alaska
  • Coral reef bleaching-whitening of reefs due to
    increased temperature
  • Earlier plant flowering
  • Earlier bird arrivals
  • Shifting of animal ranges poleward
  • More frequent EL Nino-warming of the Pacific
    ocean surface temperatures-causes changes in
    local weather patterns

14
Global warming-the debate
  • The fact that the Earth is warming is not a
    matter of debate, the evidence is clear
  • The fact that global carbon dioxide levels have
    increased is also clear
  • The debate centers around how much of it is
    caused by human involvement vs a natural cycle
  • Think about it in terms of the steps in the
    scientific method

15
Global warming in the context of the scientific
method
  • Observations-Earths temperature is warming
  • Hypothesis-due to a man-made increase in green
    house gases
  • Testing the hypothesis-many scientists hold
    different views and interpret data differently,
    but the consensus is that it is due to increases
    in greenhouse gasses from man made sources.
  • Until the data is incontrovertible, there will
    always be naysayers. Thats ok, they keep us
    honest and push the method forward-as long as
    they are within the realm of the scientific
    method
  • Lots of examples like this in modern science
    (evolution, big bang, cosmological
    interpretations of galaxy redshifts)

16
Dissenting opinions
  • American Association of Petroleum Geologists was
    the last scientific body to acknowledge human
    influence on climate change
  • Individual scientists fall into 5 categories
  • Believe global warming is not occurring or has
    ceased
  • Believe accuracy of IPCC climate projections is
    questionable
  • Believe global warming is primarily caused by
    natural processes
  • Believe cause of global warming is unknown
  • Believe global warming will benefit human society
  • In the end, only time will tell.

17
Prognosis
  • How do we know what is going to happen?
  • We dont , but it can be predicted
  • We call these global climate models
  • Based on physics (fluid dynamics and radiative
    transfer, for eg.)
  • Different models consider different effects, have
    different inputs and give a range of results
  • Model validity is verified by using them to
    predict past and current climate conditions
  • No, they are not perfect

18
Projections
19
Prognosis
  • Sea level rise of up to 1 foot
  • Reductions in ozone layer
  • More intense, less frequent hurricanes
  • Ocean ph and oxygen level reduced
  • Spread of diseases including malaria, Lyme
    disease, cholera and bubonic plague
  • Extinctions of plant an animal species
  • Population growth due to less deaths from cold
    weather
  • Changes in rainfall patterns

20
What are we doing about it
  • Kyoto Protocol
  • International environmental treaty to achieve
    stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in
    the atmosphere at a level that would prevent
    man-made interference with the climate
  • establishes legally binding commitments for the
    reduction of four greenhouse gases (carbon
    dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, sulphur
    hexafluoride), and two groups of gases
    (hydrofluorocarbons and perfluorocarbons)
    produced by (industrialized) nations,
  • general commitments for all member countries.
  • Did not impose limitations on developing
    countries (such as China)
  • initially adopted for use on 11 December 1997 in
    Kyoto, Japan
  • entered into force on 16 February 2005.
  • Signed but not ratified by the US

21
Kyoto
  • industrialized countries agreed to reduce their
    collective GHG emissions by 5.2 compared to the
    year 1990.
  • National limitations range from 8 reductions for
    the European Union and some others to 7 for the
    United States, 6 for Japan, and 0 for Russia.
  • The treaty permitted GHG emission increases of 8
    for Australia and 10 for Iceland.

22
US position
  • US signed in 1998, but this was symbolic-treaty
    is not binding until ratified.
  • Yet the US is the largest per capita emitter of
    carbon dioxide
  • Prior to Kyoto, (though with a knowledge of what
    it said) the US Senate passed a resolution that
    stated stated the sense of the Senate was that
    the United States should not be a signatory to
    any protocol that did not include binding targets
    and timetables for developing nations as well as
    industrialized nations or "would result in
    serious harm to the economy of the United
    States
  • Main concern is the economic losses associated
    with instituting the caps on carbon emission
  • Neither the Clinton nor Bush administration
    submitted the treaty for ratification
  • Obama Administrations position is that the
    treaty is about to end, there is no point in
    ratifying it (it has a little less than 3 years
    left)
  • States and cities have adopted initiatives to cap
    carbon emissions on their own, based at least in
    part on Kyoto.

23
Reasons for opposition
  • Global socialism-a scheme to transfer wealth to
    third world countries and or slow the growth of
    the worlds industrialized democracies
  • Doesnt go far enough to curb GHG emissions
  • Costs outweigh benefits
  • Using a single base year (1990) may result in
    inequities in the caps

24
Next step-beyond Kyoto
  • Meeting in Copenhagen in December 2009
  • The Copenhagen Accord was drafted by the US,
    China, India, Brazil and South Africa on December
    18, and judged a "meaningful agreement" by the
    United States government.
  • It was "taken note of", but not "adopted", in a
    debate of all the participating countries the
    next day, and it was not passed unanimously.
  • The document recognized that climate change is
    one of the greatest challenges of the present day
    and that actions should be taken to keep any
    temperature increases to below 2C.
  • The document is not legally binding and does not
    contain any legally binding commitments for
    reducing CO2 emissions.
  • Many countries and non-governmental organizations
    were opposed to this agreement, but, as of
    January 4, 2010, 138 countries have signed the
    agreement.

25
Cap and Trade
  • An environmental policy that caps emissions while
    giving source flexibility in how they comply with
    those caps-uses economic incentives to get
    compliance
  • A limit or cap on the amount of a pollutant that
    can be emitted is set. Companies or other groups
    are issued emission permits and are required to
    hold an equivalent number of allowances (or
    credits) which represent the right to emit a
    specific amount. The total amount of allowances
    and credits cannot exceed the cap, limiting total
    emissions to that level. Companies that need to
    increase their emission allowance must buy
    credits from those who pollute less called a
    trade. In effect, the buyer is paying a charge
    for polluting, while the seller is being rewarded
    for having reduced emissions by more than was
    needed. Thus, in theory, those who can reduce
    emissions most cheaply will do so, achieving the
    pollution reduction at the lowest cost to
    society.
  • Allowed under Kyoto for nations to sell their
    credits.

26
American Clean Energy and Security Act
  • Also known as the Waxman-Markey Act
  • Proposes a cap and trade system for Greenhouse
    Gas emissions
  • Requires electric utilities to meet 20 of their
    electricity demand through renewable energy
    sources and energy efficiency by 2020.
  • Invests in new clean energy technologies and
    energy efficiency, including renewable energy,
    carbon capture and sequestration, electric and
    other advanced technology vehicles, and basic
    scientific research and development.
  • Protects consumers from energy price increases.
    According to estimates from the Environmental
    Protection Agency, the reductions in carbon
    pollution required by the legislation will cost
    American families less than a postage stamp per
    day.
  • The bill requires a 17-percent emissions
    reduction from 2005 levels by 2020 this would
    reduce United States' emissions by about 80
    percent by 2050. Complementary measures in the
    legislation, such as investments in preventing
    tropical deforestation, will achieve significant
    additional reductions in carbon emissions.
  • It includes a renewable electricity standard)
    requiring each electricity provider who supplies
    over 4 million MWh to produce 20 percent of its
    electricity from renewable by 2020. There is a
    provision whereby 5 of this standard can be met
    through energy efficiency savings, as well as an
    additional 3 with certification of the Governor
    of the state in which the provider operates.
  • It provides for modernization of the electrical
    grid
  • It provides for expanded production of electric
    vehicles
  • It mandates significant increases in energy
    efficiency in buildings, home appliances, and
    electricity generation.

27
Climategate
  • Also known as the Climate Research Unit e-mail
    controversy
  • Internet leak of thousands of emails and other
    documents from the University of East Anglia's
    Climatic Research Unit (CRU).
  • emails and documents were obtained through the
    hacking of a server.
  • hacker had filtered them using keywords,
    including "Yamal", "tree rings", and "Phil
    Jones", so that these names appear in many of the
    documents

28
Climategate-what was stolen
  • more than 1,000 emails, 2,000 documents, as well
    as commented source code, pertaining to climate
    change research covering a period from 1996 until
    2009.
  • The vast majority of the emails related to four
    climatologists Phil Jones, the head of the CRU
    Michael E. Mann of Pennsylvania State University
    (PSU), one of the originators of the graph of
    temperature trends dubbed the "hockey stick
    graph Tim Osborn, a climate modeller and Mike
    Hulme, director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate
    Change Research.
  • The four were either recipients or senders of all
    but 66 of the 1,073 emails,

29
Climategate-allegations
  • Allegations that the hacked emails showed
    evidence that climate scientists manipulated
    data.
  • A few other commentators said that the evidence
    supported claims that dissenting scientific
    papers had been suppressed.
  • The Wall Street Journal reported the emails
    revealed apparent efforts to ensure the IPCC
    include their own views and exclude others and to
    withhold scientific data.
  • Reason reported that the CRU evidently plotted to
    remove journal editors with whom they disagreed
    and suppress the publication of articles that
    they disliked.
  • The ICO made a statement that the emails revealed
    that freedom of information requests were 'not
    dealt with as they should have been under the
    legislation' but that they could not prosecute
    due to statue of limitations.
  • Academics and climate change researchers said
    that nothing in the emails proved wrongdoing, and
    dismissed the allegations.
  • Independent reviews by FactCheck and the
    Associated Press said that the emails did not
    affect evidence that man made global warming is a
    real threat, and said that emails were being
    misrepresented to support unfounded claims of
    scientific misconduct. They also concluded that
    there were disturbing suggestions that scientists
    had avoided sharing scientific data with
    skeptical critics.

30
Climategate-understanding the trick
  • Many commentators quoted one email referring to a
    "trick" used in Mann's graph to deal with the
    well-known tree ring divergence problem to "hide
    the decline" that particular proxy showed for
    modern temperatures after 1950, when measured
    temperatures were rising.
  • These two phrases were taken out of context by
    climate change skeptics including Senator Jim
    Inhofe and former Governor of Alaska Sarah Palin
    as though they referred to a decline in measured
    global temperatures, even though they were
    written when temperatures were at a record high.
  • In their inquiry into allegations of research
    misconduct, Penn State reviewers found the
    so-called 'trick' was nothing more than a
    statistical method used to bring two or more
    different kinds of data sets together in a
    legitimate fashion by a technique that has been
    reviewed by a broad array of peers in the field.
  • The Parliament of the United Kingdom select
    committee inquiry concluded that "Trick appears
    to be a colloquialism for a "neat" method of
    handling data," and "hide the decline was a
    shorthand for the practice of discarding data
    known to be erroneous.
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