Title: Global Warming and the Greenhouse Effect
1Global Warming and the Greenhouse Effect
- 3rd-Order climate changes
2Recap
- 1st-order climate changes
- Driven by plate tectonics
- 300-m.y. cycle
- 12-20 degree C changes
- 2nd-order changes
- Driven by Earths orbital variations
- 20 k.y. to 400 k.y. cycle
- 5-12 degree C changes
3Climate cycle diagram
1st 2nd 3rd (little squiggles
1st order alone
1st 2nd together
43rd-order changes
- Years to centuries in length
- gt1 to 5 degree C temperature changes
- Happening CONCURRENTLY with 2nd and 1st order
changes - Example the Greenhouse effect
5What is the Greenhouse effect?
- Catastrophic climate change caused by human
activity - Industrialization Consumerism
- Burning fossil fuels releases greenhouse gases,
which heat the planet - Ozone depletion is related
- The ozone hole is real!
- Ozone filters harmful UV light
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7Popular visions of greenhouse world
- Global average temperatures increase by up to 5
degrees C - Current global average 59 F
- El Paso average high temp. for June 95 F
- For Tucson, ave. high temp. for June 100.2
- What if these numbers were to increase by 9 F?
- Widespread drought and desertification
- Much farmland rendered unproductive
8Popular vision, continued
- Global sea level rise
- ExampleHouston
- Elevation rises 1 ft for every mile inland
- If sea level rose 1 ft, then the mile closest to
the coast is submerged
9Popular vision summary
- Greatest refugee crisis in human history
- Flooded cities
- Drought
- Land made unproductive
- Health effects from increased UV exposures
- This is the popular (as in Pop) vision
- Does the science support this?
10How does the Greenhouse effect work?
- What is a greenhouse?
- A glass house used to grow tropical plants in
non-tropical areas - So is the Effect like putting the Earth in a
glass house? - NO!
- Why not?
11Greenhouse
- A glass house works because it allows the air
inside to heat up, BUT - That air does NOT mix with the cooler air outside
- This is not how the atmosphere heats
- So it shouldnt really be called the Greenhouse
effect at all!
12How it works 1
- Insolation comes in
- The energy excites electrons in the gas
molecule - The molecule re-radiates the energy back out
- This adds heat to the atmosphere
- Not the same as a glass house!
13How it works 2
- The more greenhouse gases there are, the more the
atmosphere will be warmed - Greenhouse gases are
- Carbon dioxide CO2
- Nitrous Oxide N2O
- Methane NH4
- Chlorofluorocarbons CFCs
- Do not occur naturally
- Water vapor (clouds!)
14How it works 3
- CO2 is a big player and occurs naturally
- How CO2 is added to the atmosphere
- Exchange between atmosphere seawater
- Animal respiration
- Burning fossil fuels
- Volcanism
- How CO2 is removed from atmosphere
- Exchange between atmosphere seawater
- Photosynthesis
- Formation of carbonate rocks (limestones) in
oceans
15Equivalent Carbon Dioxide
- Not all greenhouse gases heat the atmosphere the
same amount - Combine all the greenhouse gases
- For simplicity
- Example
- If you need 1L of CO2 to increase temp in a
parcel of air 1 degree - You would only need 1 mL of CFCs to do the same
16Equivalent CO2
NH4
CO2
N2O
CFC
17Assessing global warming
- If global equivalent CO2 levels increase,
- Then global temperature should increase
- We can predict how much temps. increase
- We compare our predictions with observations
- We make policy (about fossil fuels) based on this
science
18Lets look at the data
- But first
- A statistics lesson
- What are charts and graphs telling us?
- A comparison of X with Y
- Look for relationships
- Determine correlation or causation
- Example
- A graph of Science vs. Fun
- A graph of Liberal Arts vs. Fun
19Science (X) vs. Fun (Y)
- When Science increases, Fun also does
- The data points seem to line up.
- The process of fitting a line to the points is
called regression analysis - When regression line and points match, this is a
GOOD FIT
20Liberal Arts vs. Fun
- When LA increases, cant tell if fun does
- Points dont fit well to a regression line
- This is a BAD FIT
- A weak trend? Which way?
- What would happen if you only saw the regression
line? - You would change your major to Science
21Actual CO2 Levels
- Good fit?
- Why the increase between 1750 and 1850?
- Industrial Revolution
- Why the drop around 1930?
- Great depression
- Why the increase in 1945-1950?
- End of WW2, baby boomers
- Why the drop around 1972?
- Gas crisis, OPEC
- Active in atmosphere for 500 to 200 years
22More CO2 Data
23Methane data
- Good fit?
- 58 of methane produced by agriculture
- Rice paddies
- Cows (flatulence)
- Deforestation by fire
- Coal mining
- Coal burning
- Landfills
- Active in atmosphere for 10 years
24N2O data
- Good fit?
- Deforestation by fire
- Use of fertilizers
- Steel refining
- Active in atmosphere for 150 yrs
25CFC Data
- Global CFC emissions decreasing due to Intl law
- All CFCs human made
- Used as propellant and refrigerant
- Active in atmosphere for centuries
- Warming and breaking up ozone molecules
- This is why you shouldnt vent your A/C!
26CFC Dataemissions
27CFC Datasales production
28Equivalent CO2
- 295 ppm in 1750
- 425 in 1990
- Expected to be 600
- in 2035
29Summary
- No doubt equivalent CO2 has increased due to
human activity - No doubt this will produce global warming
- How much?
30Summary of 22 climate models
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32Estimations of contributions to sea level rise
33Predictions for precipitation and temp. increases
- Warmer temps may promote more rain in some places
- Assuming lots of cloud cover
- Some areas will experience droughts
34Observations
- Not computer models but real data
35Temp/precip changes for U.S. from 1901-1987
36Global temps over 99 years
- Zero is an average of all temps.
- Good fit?
- What if you only saw the points at 1912 and 1974?
- You would say temps have decreased!
37Sea Level Rise 1
- Good fit?
- Zero value is average of measured levels from
1915-1979 - When was level lowest?
- When was it highest?
- What is the biggest net increase?
38Sea Level Rise 2
- Is 13-14 cm a big increase?
- Depends on where you live!
39Desertification-related warming trends
40Global Precipitation Index
- Y-axis values are percentiles
- .50 is average rainfall for an area
- Has global precip increased?
- Look at regression line
41Temperatures in the stratosphere
- Stratosphere is from 12-50 km high
- Above weather zone
- Good fit?
- Trend?
- Decreasing
- WHY? (stay tuned)
42Summary of observed data
- Global temperatures have increased, but not as
much as predicted - Rainfall has increased, but far less than
predicted - Sea level has increased more than predicted
- The stratosphere is actually cooling
43Why dont models match observations?
- Human error, computers not sophisticated enough,
etc. - Big Reason 1 Clouds are not well understood
- Big Reason 2 Sulfate emissions
44Sulfate (SO4) Emissions
- Produced by steel refining and coal mining
- One localization in eastern U.S.
- SO4 promotes formation of clouds
- Leads to local cooling and higher precip
- Leads to reduction in average temps.
45So whos responsible?
- Industrialized countries?
- U.S., Europe?
- Rapidly deforesting regions?
- Central and South America?
- It depends on how you look at it
46Fossil fuel CO2 emissions by country
- U.S. Highest
- USSR next
- Spain lowest
- Levels for Mexico are pre-NAFTA
- 1988
47Fossil fuel emissions per capita by country
- Per capita per person
- 1988 data
- Pre-NAFTA
- Before German reunification
- U.S. second
48Fossil fuel CO2 emissions per 1000 of GNP
- U.S. way below average
- Meaning U.S. emitted less CO2 for every 1000 of
GNP than Poland, China, Mexico - U.S. more efficient or cleaner than some,
less than others
49What about the big picture?
- How does global warming/greenhouse effect compare
with natural 1st-and 2nd order climate changes?
50Atmospheric CO2 over 150 K.Y.
51Global temps over 850 K.Y.
52Implications for policy 1
- Greenhouse effect small when compared to 2nd
order changes - But greenhouse effect takes place on human
timescales - Can we survive it? Probably, but does that mean
we should have to?
53Implications for policy 2
- Sea level change unimportant for inland residents
- Wealthy countries have better infrastructure to
cope with flooding of coastal cities - What about poor countries?
54Implications for policy 3
- Many areas flooded by sea or made into desert,
but many areas will also be opened up - Example when Canadian tundra melts
- Again, just because things might balance out,
should warming be allowed to continue? - Is there an acceptable number of people who are
displaced/killed by global climate change? - If so, what is it?
- Who decides?
55Implications for policy 4
- How is the greenhouse effect stopped?
- Reduction in fossil fuel emissions
- How do we reduce fossil fuel dependence?
- Alternative energy
- Conservation
- Reduction in consumerism
- Education
- TAAS/TAKS requirements for stewardship vs.
consumerism
56Implications for policy 5
- Rethinking individual consumerism?
- Rethinking national energy policy?
- Rethinking unlimited economic growth as a
cure-all? - Reconnecting the economy to the environment?
57Greenhouse Effect Exam 3
- On exam day you will bring this handout
- These will be the two basic questions
- 1. Should we be concerned about global warming?
- Why or why not?
- 2. Are you concerned about global warming
- Why or why not?
- You must use five of the figures in the handout
to back up your opinion. - You will be graded on the clarity/quality of your
opinion, not what your opinion is