Title: 4. THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT
1- 4. THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT
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- If the earth were the diameter of an apple, then
the earth plus its atmosphere would be the
diameter of - A grapefruit
- A basketball
- An apple
2Greenhouse gases constitute a tiny portion of
the atmosphere.
- Nitrogen (N2) 78
- Oxygen (O2) 21
- Carbon dioxide (CO2) .035
- Methane (CH4) 0.00017
- Ozone (O3) 0.000001
What makes the bottom 3 greenhouse gases?
3- Despite being a small component of the
atmosphere, methane carbon dioxide are potent
greenhouse gases. - See handout
- p. 1) Triatomic compounds absorb long wavelength,
low energy light radiated from earth (through
rotation vibration). - p. 2) Light radiation from earth shows troughs at
wavelengths absorbed by ozone (O3), H2O, and CO2.
4- Sun emits high energy (short wavelength) photons.
- Atmosphere absorbs a lot of it.
- Earth reflects low energy (long wavelength)
photons. - When gases in the atmosphere that absorb long
wavelengths increase, more energy is trapped
inside the atmosphere ( greenhouse effect).
5- Major Greenhouse Gases
- CO2 Carbon Dioxide
- CH4 Methane
- CFCs Chloroflurocarbons
- O3 Ozone
- N2O Nitrous Oxide
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6Estimated climate forcings, 1850 2000 Red /
net warming (jacket) Blue / - net cooling
(parasol)
Punchline CO2 has caused the most warming.
Hansen et al. PNAS 979875
7- Warming of the climate system is unequivocal.
- Most of the observed increase in temperatures
since the mid-20th century is very likely due to
anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations. - Atmospheric CO2 (379 ppm) in 2005 exceed by far
the natural range over the last 650,000 years. - Also true for methane (1774 ppb)
IPCC 2007
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9From your reading the hockey stick
10Future Warming Consequences
- Predicted ? in CO2 forcing, 2000 to 50 1.4 to
2.4 (IPCC 2001) - 3.5 - 10º F predicted rise in 21st century
(IPCC 2001) - 15-37 of species will be committed to
extinction by 2050 -
-
- (Thomas et al. Nature 427 145).
- If current trends continue, property damage from
climate change will exceed gross world product by
2050 - (CGMU insurance, Britain)
11- 5. GREENHOUSE MITIGATION
- SCIENCE -
- There is high agreement and much evidence that
all stabilisation levels assessed can be achieved
by deployment of a portfolio of technologies that
are either currently available or expected to be
commercialised in coming decades, assuming
appropriate and effective incentives are in
place. -
(IPCC 2007)
12- Scientists assume that once we knowscientific
principles we can devise effective policies to
achieve social goals.
13- In the mid 1990s, the Union of Concerned
Scientists estimated a near-complete transition
to renewable energy could occur in the U.S. for
25 bil. / yr. over 10 years. - Gelbspan 1995 The Heat is On The Climate
Crisis, the Coverup, the Prescription p. 98
14- Fossil fuels are
- Centralized
- Capital-intensive
- Produce few jobs
- Renewable energy is
- Decentralized
- Not capital-intensive
- Produces about 10 times more jobs than fossil
fuels per unit of energy produced
15 16- The federal government spends more than 20
billion a year to subsidize the development of
oil, coal, and natural gas. - Gelbspan 1995 p. 180
17- Political donations, 1999-2000
- The entire alternative energy industry
783,000 - Enron
2.3 million - Exxon-Mobil
1.3 million - 2001 Center for Responsive Politics, A Money In
Politics Backgrounder on the Energy Industry
18- BUSINESS -
- At a recent meeting in Boston attended by the
- strange bedfellows of investors and
- environmentalists, the leaders of 13 major
pension - funds controlling nearly 800 billion in assets
- called on the Securities Exchange Commission
- to require companies to tell shareholders about
- their potential financial exposure from global
- warming and how they plan to respond.
Boston Globe, Tuesday May 4, 2004
19- 6. FEEDBACK LOOPSPositive As planet warms,
warming accelerates. - Lost albedo (reflectivity) from glaciers earth
absorbs more heat
NASA/GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER SCIENTIFIC
VISUALIZATION STUDIO (DATA) ROB GERSTON, GSFC
20- 2. Fires release CO2
- 3. Habitats become too hot for current vegetation
- Death decay releases CO2
- Termites release CH4
21- Uncertain Feedback
- 4. Water
- A warmer earth will have more atmospheric
moisture. - Water is a greenhouse gas.
- Clouds act like a parasol.
- Effect of greenhouse parasol is impossible to
predict.
22- 5. Permafrost
- Melting permafrost around peatlands leads to
increased vegetation. - But it also leads to increased methane emissions.
237. THE LONGER HISTORY OF CARBON
BR_Nature 453291
Relative to the last 800,000 years, we are headed
off the charts.
What about before that??
24CO2 estimated using isotopic markers from marine
algae note big drop about 30 Mya
Fig. from Stoll, Nature 441579
25Even higher levels 450 Mya!
gt20X more CO2 than now
So, why worry?
Radiation of mammals
x present concen.
26- Greg Retallack, U of O Why did atmospheric
carbon diminish at end of Devonian? Hypothesis - Development of large land plants
- Roots caused soil to weather
- Calcium and magnesium weathered from soil went to
oceans combined with dissolved sodium
bicarbonate to form insoluble compounds. - Oceans absorbed more carbon from atmosphere.
27See Ricklefs 3rd ed. Fig. 12-6
- 25,000,000
Most of the carbon from earlier hothouse
atmospheres is bound up in limestone (CaCO3), and
is not in danger of being liberated any time soon.