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Methane’s Impacts on Climate Change May Be Twice
Previous Estimates:
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center--EOS Project Science Office, July 19,
2005
<http://www.innovations-report.de/html/berichte/umwelt_naturschutz/bericht-46717.html>
Scientists face difficult challenges in predicting and understanding
how much our climate is changing. When it comes to gases that trap heat
in our atmosphere, called greenhouse gases (GHGs), scientists typically
look at how much of the gases exist in the atmosphere.
However, Drew Shindell, a climatologist at NASA’s Goddard Institute
for Space Studies, New York, NY, believes we need to look at the GHGs
when they are emitted at Earth’s surface, instead of looking at
the GHGs themselves after they have been mixed into the atmosphere. "The
gas molecules undergo chemical changes and once they do, looking at them
after they’ve mixed and changed in the atmosphere doesn’t
give an accurate picture of their effect," Shindell said. "For
example, the amount of methane in the atmosphere is affected by pollutants
that change methane’s chemistry, and it doesn’t reflect the
effects of methane on other greenhouse gases," said Shindell, "so
it’s not directly related to emissions, which are what we set policies
for."
Chemically reactive GHGs include methane and ozone (carbon dioxide, the
most important GHG, is largely unreactive). Once methane and the molecules
that create ozone are released into the air by both natural and human-induced
sources, these gases mix and react together, which transforms their compositions.
When gases are altered, their contribution to the greenhouse warming effect
also shifts. So, the true effect of a single GHG emission on climate becomes
very hard to single out.
Some of the major investigations into the state of our warming planet
come from a series of reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) Assessment. These reports involved the work of hundreds
of climate experts. The reports rely on measurements of greenhouse gases
as they exist in the atmosphere, after they may have mixed with other
gases. In other words, the findings in the report do not reflect the quantities
that were actually emitted.
Shindell finds there are advantages to measuring emissions of greenhouse
gases and isolating their impacts, as opposed to analyzing them after
they have mixed in the atmosphere. His study on the subject was recently
published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters. In the study, when
the individual effects of each gas on global warming were added together,
the total was within 10 percent of the impacts of all the gases mixed
together. The small difference in the two amounts was a sign to Shindell
that little error was introduced by separating the emissions from one
another.
After isolating each greenhouse gas and calculating the impact of each
emission on our climate with a computer model, Shindell and his colleagues
found some striking differences in how much these gases contribute overall
to climate change.
The leading greenhouse gases include carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous
oxide, and halocarbons. These gases are called ‘well mixed’
greenhouse gases because of their long lifetimes of a decade or more,
which allows them to disperse evenly around the atmosphere. They are emitted
from both man-made and natural sources. Ozone in the lower atmosphere,
called tropospheric ozone, a major component of polluted air or smog that
is damaging to human and ecosystem health, also has greenhouse warming
effects. In the upper atmosphere, ozone protects life on Earth from the
sun’s harmful ultraviolet rays.
According to new calculations, the impacts of methane on climate warming
may be double the standard amount attributed to the gas. The new interpretations
reveal methane emissions may account for a third of the climate warming
from well-mixed greenhouse gases between the 1750s and today. The IPCC
report, which calculates methane’s affects once it exists in the
atmosphere, states that methane increases in our atmosphere account for
only about one sixth of the total effect of well-mixed greenhouse gases
on warming.
Part of the reason the new calculations give a larger effect is that
they include the sizeable impact of methane emissions on tropospheric
ozone since the industrial revolution. Tropospheric ozone is not directly
emitted, but is instead formed chemically from methane, other hydrocarbons,
carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxides. The IPCC report includes the effects
of tropospheric ozone increases on climate, but it is not attributed to
particular sources. By categorizing the climate effects according to emissions,
Shindell and colleagues found the total effects of methane emissions are
substantially larger. In other words, the true source of some of the warming
that is normally attributed to tropospheric ozone is really due to methane
that leads to increased abundance of tropospheric ozone. According to
the study, the effects of other pollutants were relatively minor. Nitrogen
oxide emissions can even lead to cooling by fostering chemical reactions
that destroy methane. This is partly why estimates based on the amount
of methane in the atmosphere give the gas a smaller contribution to climate
change.
Molecule for molecule, Methane is 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide
as a greenhouse gas, but CO2 is much more abundant than methane and the
predicted growth rate is far greater. Since 1750, methane concentrations
in the atmosphere have more than doubled, though the rate of increase
has slowed during the 1980-90s, and researchers don’t understand
why. Controlling methane could reap a big bang for the buck. Another bonus
of this perspective is that in order to manage greenhouse gases, policy
decisions must focus on cutting emissions, because that’s where
humans have some control.
"If we control methane, which the U.S. is already starting to do,
then we are likely to mitigate global warming more than one would have
thought, so that’s a very positive outcome," Shindell said.
"Control of methane emissions turns out to be a more powerful lever
to control global warming than would be anticipated."
Sources of methane include natural sources like wetlands, gas hydrates
in the ocean floor, permafrost, termites, oceans, freshwater bodies, and
non-wetland soils. Fossil fuels, cattle, landfills and rice paddies are
the main human-related sources. Previous studies have shown that new rice
harvesting techniques can significantly reduce methane emissions and increase
yields.
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