Title: Human Impact on the Atmosphere
1Human Impact on the Atmosphere
2Pollution Thorpe, Gary S., M.S., (2002).
Barrons How to prepare for the AP Environmental
Science Advanced Placement Exam
- The term Smog (smoke and fog) was first used in
1905 to describe sulfur dioxide emissions. - In 1952, severe pollution took the lives of 5000
people in London - It isnt pollution thats harming the
environment. Its the impurities in our air and
water that are doing it.
Former U.S. Vice President Dan Quayle
www.aqmd.gov/pubinfo/ 97annual.html
3TheCleanAirAct
- Congress found
- Most people now live in urban areas
- Growth results in air pollution
- Air pollution endangers living things
- It decided
- Prevention and control at the source was
appropriate - Such efforts are the responsibility of states
and local authorities - Federal funds and leadership are essential for
the development of effective programs
4Clean Air Act
- Originally signed 1963
- States controlled standards
- 1970 Uniform Standards by Federal Govt.
- Criteria Pollutants
- Primary Human health risk
- Secondary Protect materials, crops, climate,
visibility, personal comfort
5Clean Air Act
- 1990 version
- Acid rain, urban smog, toxic air pollutants,
ozone depletion, marketing pollution rights,
VOCs - 1997 version
- Reduced ambient ozone levels
- Cost 15 billion/year -gt save 15,000 lives
- Reduce bronchitis cases by 60,000 per year
- Reduce hospital respiratory admission 9000/year
6Clean Air Act
- President George W. Bush signed rules amending
Clean Air Act that allowed power plants and other
industries to increase pollution significantly
without adopting control measures
7http//www.cnn.com/2003/LAW/12/24/bush.clean.air.a
p/index.html
Appeals court blocks Bush clean air
changes Wednesday, December 24, 2003 Posted 210
PM EST (1910 GMT)
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- A federal appeals court on
Wednesday blocked new Bush administration changes
to the Clean Air Act from going into effect the
next day, in a challenge from state attorneys
general and cities that argued they would harm
the environment and public health.
8Clean Air Act http//www.epa.gov/air/oaq_caa.html
- Title I - Air Pollution Prevention and Control
- Part A - Air Quality and Emission Limitations
- Part B - Ozone Protection (replaced by Title VI)
- Part C - Prevention of Significant Deterioration
of Air Quality - Part D - Plan Requirements for Nonattainment
Areas - Title II - Emission Standards for Moving Sources
- Part A - Motor Vehicle Emission and Fuel
Standards - Part B - Aircraft Emission Standards
- Part C - Clean Fuel Vehicles
- Title III - General
- Title IV - Acid Deposition Control
- Title V - Permits
- Title VI - Stratospheric Ozone Protection
9Outdoor Air Pollution
10(No Transcript)
11Major Sources of Primary Pollutants
- Stationary Sources
- Combustion of fuels for power and heat Power
Plants - Other burning such as Wood crop burning or
forest fires - Industrial/ commercial processes
- Solvents and aerosols
- Mobile Sources
- Highway cars, trucks, buses and motorcycles
- Off-highway aircraft, boats, locomotives, farm
equipment, RVs, construction machinery, and lawn
mowers
12(No Transcript)
1354 million metric tons from mobile sources in 1990
14Human Impact on Atmosphere
- Burning Fossil Fuels
- Using Nitrogen fertilizers and burning fossil
fuels - Refining petroleum and burning fossil fuels
- Manufacturing
- Adds CO2 and O3 to troposphere
- Global Warming
- Altering Climates
- Produces Acid Rain
- Releases NO, NO2, N2O, and NH3 into troposphere
- Produces acid rain
- Releases SO2 into troposphere
- Releases toxic heavy metals (Pb, Cd, and As) into
troposphere
www.dr4.cnrs.fr/gif-2000/ air/products.html
15Criteria Air Pollutants
- EPA uses six "criteria pollutants" as indicators
of air quality - Nitrogen Dioxide NO2
- Ozone ground level O3
- Carbon monoxide CO
- Lead Pb
- Particulate Matter PM10 (PM 2.5)
- Sulfur Dioxide SO2
- Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs)
- EPA established for each concentrations above
which adverse effects on health may occur
16Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2)
- Properties reddish brown gas, formed as fuel
burnt in car, strong oxidizing agent, forms
Nitric acid in air - Effects acid rain, lung and heart problems,
decreased visibility (yellow haze), suppresses
plant growth - Sources fossil fuels combustion, power plants,
forest fires, volcanoes, bacteria in soil - Class Nitrogen oxides (NOx)
- EPA Standard 0.053 ppm
17Mobile Source Emissions Nitrogen Oxides
18Ozone (O3)
- Properties colorless, unpleasant odor, major
part of photochemical smog - Effects lung irritant, damages plants, rubber,
fabric, eyes, - Sources Created by sunlight acting on NOx and
VOC , photocopiers, cars, industry, gas vapors,
chemical solvents, incomplete fuel combustion
products - Class photochemical oxidants
19Ozone (O3)
- 10,000 to 15,000 people in US admitted to
hospitals each year due to ozone-related illness - Children more susceptible
- Airways narrower
- More time spent outdoors
20Mobile Source Emissions Hydrocarbons
Precursors to Ozone
21Carbon Monoxide (CO)
- Properties colorless, odorless, heavier than
air, 0.0036 of atmosphere - Effects binds tighter to Hb than O2, mental
functions and visual acuity, even at low levels - Sources incomplete combustion of fossil fuels 60
- 95 from auto exhaust - Class carbon oxides (CO2, CO)
- EPA Standard 9 ppm
- 5.5 billion tons enter atmosphere/year
22Mobile Source Emissions - CO
23Lead (Pb)
- Properties grayish metal
- Effects accumulates in tissue affects kidneys,
liver and nervous system (children most
susceptible) mental retardation possible
carcinogen 20 of inner city kids have high - Sources particulates, smelters, batteries
- Class toxic or heavy metals
- EPA Standard 1.5 ug/m3
- 2 million tons enter atmosphere/year
24Suspended Particulate Matter (PM10)
- Properties particles suspended in air (lt10 um)
- Effects lung damage, mutagenic, carcinogenic,
teratogenic - Sources burning coal or diesel, volcanoes,
factories, unpaved roads, plowing, lint, pollen,
spores, burning fields - Class SPM dust, soot, asbestos, lead, PCBs,
dioxins, pesticides - EPA Standard 50 ug/m3 (annual mean)
25Mobile Source Emissions Fine Particulate Matter
(PM2.5)
26Sulfur Dioxide (SO2)
- Properties colorless gas with irritating odor
- Effects produces acid rain (H2SO4), breathing
difficulties, eutrophication due to sulfate
formation, lichen and moss are indicators - Sources burning high sulfur coal or oil,
smelting or metals, paper manufacture - Class sulfur oxides
- EPA Standard 0.3 ppm (annual mean)
- Combines with water and NH4 to increase soil
fertility
27VOCs (Volatile Organic Compounds)
- Properties organic compounds (hydrocarbons) that
evaporate easily, usually aromatic - Effects eye and respiratory irritants
carcinogenic liver, CNS, or kidney damage
damages plants lowered visibility due to brown
haze global warming - Sources vehicles (largest source), evaporation
of solvents or fossil fuels, aerosols, paint
thinners, dry cleaning - Class HAPs (Hazardous Air Pollutants)
- Methane
- Benzene
- Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), etc.
- Concentrations indoors up to 1000x outdoors
- 600 million tons of CFCs
28Other Air Pollutants
- Carbon dioxide
- ChloroFluoroCarbons
- Formaldehyde
- Benzene
- Asbestos
- Manganese
- Dioxins
- Cadmium
- Others not yet fully characterized
29Formation Intensity
- Factors
- Local climate (inversions, air pressure,
temperature, humidity) - Topography (hills and mountains)
- Population density
- Amount of industry
- Fuels used by population and industry for
heating, manufacturing, transportation, power - Weather rain, snow,wind
- Buildings (slow wind speed)
- Mass transit used
- Economics
30Thermal Inversion
31Smog Forms
...when polluted air is stagnant (weather
conditions, geographic location)
Los Angeles, CA
32Primary Pollutants
CO
CO2
Secondary Pollutants
SO2
NO
NO2
SO3
Most hydrocarbons
HNO3
H2SO4
Most suspended particles
H2O2
O3
PANs
and
salts
Most
Natural
Sources
Stationary
Mobile
33Photochemical Smog
UV radiation H2O O2
Primary Pollutants NO2 Hydrocarbons
Secondary Pollutants HNO3 O3 nitric
acid ozone Photochemical Smog
Auto Emissions
34Solar radiation
Photochemical Smog
Ultraviolet radiation
NO Nitric oxide
O2 Molecular oxygen
O Atomic oxygen
NO2 Nitrogen dioxide
H2O Water
Hydrocarbons
PANs Peroxyacyl nitrates
Aldehydes (e.g., formaldehyde)
O3 Ozone
HNO3 Nitric acid
P h o t o c h e m i c a l S m o g
35Indoor Air Pollution
36Why is indoor air quality important?
- 70 to 90 of time spent indoors, mostly at home
- Many significant pollution sources in the home
(e.g. gas cookers, paints and glues) - Personal exposure to many common pollutants is
driven by indoor exposure - Especially important for susceptible groups
e.g. the sick, old and very young
37Exposure
- Time spent in various environments in US and
less-developed countries
38House of Commons Select Committee Enquiry on
Indoor Air Pollution (1991)
- There is evidence that 3 million people have
asthma in the UK and this is increasing by 5
per annum. - Overall there appears to be a worryingly large
number of health problems which could be
connected with indoor pollution and which affect
very large numbers of the population. - The Committee recommends that the Government
develop guidelines and codes of practice for
indoor air quality in buildings which
specifically identify exposure limits for an
extended list of pollutants
39Sources of Indoor Air Pollutants
- Building materials
- Furniture
- Furnishings and fabrics
- Glues
- Cleaning products
- Other consumer products
- Combustion appliances (cookers and heaters)
- Open fires
- Tobacco smoking
- Cooking
- House dust mites, bacteria and moulds
- Outdoor air
40Important Indoor Air pollutants
- Nitrogen dioxide
- Carbon monoxide
- Formaldehyde
- Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs)
- House dust mites (and other allergens, e.g. from
pets) - Environmental tobacco smoke
- Fine particles
- Chlorinated organic compounds (e.g. pesticides)
- Asbestos and man-made mineral fibres
- Radon
41Health Effects
- Nitrogen dioxide
- Respiratory irritant
- Elevated risk of respiratory illness in children,
perhaps resulting from increased susceptibility
to respiratory infection inconsistent evidence
for effects in adults - Concentrations in kitchens can readily exceed WHO
and EPA standards
42Health Effects
- Carbon monoxide
- An asphyxiant and toxicant
- Hazard of acute intoxication, mostly from
malfunctioning fuel-burning appliances and
inadequate or blocked fumes - Possibility of chronic effects of long-term
exposure to non- lethal concentrations,
particularly amongst susceptible groups
43Health Effects
- Formaldehyde
- Sensory and respiratory irritant and sensitizer
- Possible increased risk of asthma and chronic
bronchitis in children at higher exposure levels - Individual differences in sensory and other
transient responses - Caution over rising indoor concentrations
44Health Effects
- Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs)
- Occur in complex and variable mixtures
- Main health effects relate to comfort and
well-being, but benzene (and other VOCs) are
carcinogenic - Concern about possible role of VOCs in the
aetiology of multiple chemical sensitivity also
implicated in sick building syndrome
45Health Effects
- House dust mites
- House dust mites produce Der p1 allergen, a
potent sensitizer - Good evidence of increased risk of sensitization
with increasing allergen exposure, but this does
not necessarily lead to asthma - Small reductions in exposure will not necessarily
lead to reduced incidence and/or symptoms - Indoor humidity is important
46Health Effects
- Fungi and bacteria
- Dampness and mould-growth linked to self-reported
respiratory conditions, but little convincing
evidence for association between measured
airborne fungi and respiratory disease - Insufficient data to relate exposure to
(non-pathogenic) bacteria to health effects in
the indoor environment
47Health Effects
- Environmental tobacco smoke (ETS)
- Sudden infant death syndrome
- Lower respiratory tract illness
- Middle ear disease
- Asthma
- 12 million children exposed to secondhand smoke
in homes
48Health Effects
- Fine particles
- Consistent evidence that exposure to small
airborne particles (e.g. PM10) in ambient air can
impact on human health mechanisms uncertain - Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and
Cardiovascular Disease patients and asthmatics
probably at extra risk - Relative importance of indoor sources is unknown
49Health Effects
- Radon
- Can cause lung cancer
- Estimated that 7,000 to 30,000 Americans die each
year from radon-induced lung cancer - Only smoking causes more lung cancer deaths
- Smokers more at risk than non-smokers
50Radon Risk Non-Smoker
Radon Level (pCI/L) If 1000 people who did not smoke were exposed to this level over a lifetime.. About X would get lung cancer This risk of cancer from radon exposure compares to What to do
20 8 Being killed in a violent crime Fix your home
10 4 Fix your home
8 3 10x risk of dying in a plane crash Fix your home
4 2 Risk of drowning Fix your home
2 lt1 Risk of dying in a home fire Fix your home
1.3 lt1 Average indoor radon level Fix your home
.4 lt1 Average indoor radon level Fix your home
If you are a former smoker, your risk may be
higher
51Radon Risk Smoker
Radon Level (pCI/L) If 1000 people who smoke were exposed to this level over a lifetime.. About X would get lung cancer This risk of cancer from radon exposure compares to What to do Stop smoking and
20 135 100x risk of drowning Fix your home
10 71 100x risk of dying in a home fire Fix your home
8 57 Fix your home
4 29 100x risk of dying in a plane crash Fix your home
2 15 2x the risk of dying in a car crash Fix your home
1.3 9 Average indoor radon level Fix your home
.4 3 Average indoor radon level Fix your home
If you are a former smoker, your risk may be lower
52Radon
- 55 of our exposure to radiation comes from radon
- colorless, tasteless, odorless gas
- formed from the decay of uranium
- found in nearly all soils
- levels vary
53(From http//www.epa.gov/iaq/radon/zonemap.html)
Zone pCi/L 1 gt4 2 2 - 4
3 lt2
54Radon How it Enters Buildings
- Cracks in solid floors
- Construction joints
- Cracks in walls
- Gaps in suspended floors
- Gaps around service pipes
- Cavities inside walls
- The water supply
http//www.epa.gov/iaq/radon/pubs/citguide.htmlho
wdoes
55Radon Reducing the Risks
- Sealing cracks in floors and walls
- Simple systems using pipes and fans
- More information http//www.epa.gov/iaq/radon/pub
s/consguid.htmlreductiontech
56- Sick Building Syndrome (SBS)
- vs
- Building Related Illness (BRI)
57Sick Building Syndrome
- A persistent set of symptoms in gt 20 population
- Causes(s) not known or recognizable
- Complaints/Symptoms relieved after exiting
building
58Complaints/Symptoms
- Headaches
- Fatigue
- Reduced Mentation
- Irritability
- Eye, nose or throat irritation
- Dry Skin
- Nasal Congestion
- Difficulty Breathing
- Nose Bleeds
- Nausea
59Building Related Illness
- Clinically Recognized Disease
- Exposure to indoor air pollutants
- Recognizable Causes
60Clinically Recognized Diseases
- Pontiac Fever Legionella spp.
- Legionnaire's Disease
- Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis
- Humidifier Fever
- Asthma
- Allergy
- Respiratory Disease
- Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
61Ventilation
62Movement of Air Into / Out of Homes
- Amount of air available to dilute pollutants
- important indicator of the likely contaminant
concentration - Indoor air can mix with outside air by three
mechanisms - infiltration
- natural ventilation
- forced ventilation
63Movement of Air Into / Out of Homes
- Infiltration
- natural air exchange that occurs between a
building and its environment when the doors and
windows are closed - leakage through holes or openings in the building
envelope - pressure induced
- due to pressure differentials inside and outside
of the building - especially important with cracks and other
openings in wall
64Movement of Air Into / Out of Homes
- Infiltration
- Temperature induced (stack effect)
- driven by air movement through holes in floors,
ceilings - in winter, warm air in a building wants to rise,
exits through cracks in ceiling and draws in
65Movement of Air Into / Out of Homes
- Natural ventilation
- air exchange that occurs when windows or doors
are opened to increase air circulation - Forced ventilation
- mechanical air handling systems used to induce
air exchange using fans and blowers - Trade-offs
- cut infiltration to decrease heating and cooling
costs vs. indoor air quality problems
66Movement of Air Into / Out of Homes
- Infiltration rates
- Influenced by
- how fast wind is blowing, pressure differentials
- temperature differential between inside and
outside of house - location of leaks in building envelope
67Air Pollution Prevention
68Specific Air Pollution Treatment Technology
- Traditional
- Move factory to remote location
- Build taller smokestack so wind blows pollution
elsewhere - New
- Biofiltration vapors pumped through soil where
microbes degrade - High-energy destruction high-voltage electricity
- Membrane separation diffusion of organic vapors
through membrane - Oxidation High temperature combustor
69Absorption
70Adsorption
71Combustion
72Cyclone
73Filtration
74Electrostatic Precipitator
75Liquid Scrubber
76Sulfur Dioxide Control
http//www.apt.lanl.gov/projects/cctc/factsheets/p
uair/adflugasdemo.html
77Air Pollution Results
78(No Transcript)
79Comparison of 1970 and 1999 Emissions
80(No Transcript)
81(No Transcript)
82(No Transcript)
83Number of People Living in Counties with Air
Quality Concentrations Above the Level of the
National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) in
1999
84Trends in Sulfur Dioxide Emissions Following
Implementation of Phase I of the Acid Rain
Program Total State-level Utility SO2 (1980,
1990, 1999)
85FiftyYearsofAirPollution
Figures are in millions of metric tons per year
86MobileSourcesThe LastTen Years
VOCs CO NOx PM10 SOx Lead
-3
-8
-10
-24
-29
- Percent reductions shown are based on estimates
of tons/year from mobile sources over the 1981 -
1990 time period
-85
87Who isAffected byAir Pollution?
63
Over 74 million people are subjected to high
levels of at least one of these pollutants
22
19
9
5
1
Ozone CO NO2 PM10 SO2 Lead
- Millions of people living in counties with air
quality that exceeds each NAAQS (1990 data)
88Milestonesin theControlofAutomotiveEmissions
- 1952 - Autos linked to air pollution
- 1963 - Original CAA, PCV valves
- 1968 - HC CO exhaust controls
- 1970 - CAA amendments, EPA formed
- 1971 - Evaporative controls
- 1972 - First I/M Program
- 1973 - NOx exhaust controls
- 1975 - First catalytic converters
- 1981 - New cars meet statutory limits
- 1989 - Volatility limits on gasoline
- 1990 - New CAA Amendments
89- 1987 Montreal Protocol CFC emissions should be
reduced by 50 by the year 2000 (they had been
increasing 3 per year.) - 1990 London amendments production of CFCs,
CCl4, and halons should cease entirely by 2000. - 1992 Copenhagen agreements phase-out
accelerated to 1996.
90What is the Kyoto Protocol?
- How did we get to Kyoto?
- What are the goals of Kyoto?
- Is Kyoto enough?
91Steps to Kyoto
- 1985 International Council of Scientific Unions
(Prof. Bert Bolin) - Many important economic and social decisions are
being made today on long term projects, all based
on the assumption that past climatic data,
without modification, are a reliable guide to the
future. This is no longer a good assumption
92Steps to Kyoto
- 1988 - Toronto - creation of IPCC
- warmest summer to date, international meeting in
Toronto - Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change formed
- 1990 - First report (FAR)
- overview of the current science of climate change
93IPCC
- IPCC headed by Prof. Bert Bolin
- 3 working groups
- Climate Science
- Climate Impacts
- Response Strategies
- 1992 - FAR used in Earth Summit meeting in Rio -
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change
94IPCC
- 1995 IPCC Second Assessment Report (SAR)
completed, published in 1996 - WG I Climate Science
- WG II Impact, Adaptation and Mitigation
- WG III Economic and Social Dimensions
- The balance of evidence suggests a discernible
human influence on global climate
95IPCC
- 1997 Kyoto meeting - binding targets set
- culmination of a series of meetings since Rio
(1992) - 2001 Bonn - rescuing Kyoto
- 2001 IPCC Third Assessment Report (TAR)
- WG I Climate Science
- WG II Vulnerabilities, Impacts and Adaptation
- WG III Mitigation
96IPCC
- TAR (2001)
- There is new and stronger evidence that most of
the warming observed over the last 50 years is
attributable to human activities (WG I) - Global losses in weather related natural
disasters have increased ten-fold from the 1960s
to the 1990s, and that a portion of this increase
must be due to increases in frequency and
intensity of some extreme events. (WG II) - most of the opportunities to reduce emissions
will come from energy efficiency gains and in
reducing release of greenhouse gases from
industry (WG III)
97Goals of Kyoto Protocol
- Reduction of greenhouse gases to below 1990
levels - 5.2 world wide reduction on average by
2008-2012 - 6 for Canada by 2008-2012
- When sufficient countries ratify the Protocol (at
least 55 countries comprising at least 55 of
emissions), Protocol comes into effect - USA - 25 of emissions
98Kyoto Emissions Agreement
99Annex B Countries Annex B Countries Non Annex B Countries Non Annex B Countries
 Fossil-Fuel CO2 Emissions (million metric tonnes C) Bunkers (million metric tonnes C) Fossil-Fuel CO2 Emissions (million metric tonnes C) Bunkers (million metric tonnes C)
1990 3851 78 2126 41
1991 3751 88 2306 41
1992 3663 92 2291 43
1993 3610 92 2341 48
1994 3607 92 2487 50
1995 3624 95 2607 52
1996 3674 95 2704 58
1997 3696 97 2775 61
1998 3690 100 2756 62
Source Gregg Marland and Tom Boden (CDIAC, Oak
Ridge National Laboratory).
100Greenhouse Effect - Conclusion
- Since 1700, humans have directly or indirectly
caused the concentration of the major greenhouse
gases to increase - Scientists predict that this increase may enhance
the greenhouse effect making the planet warmer by
0.3 to 0.6 degrees Celsius
101Cost of Regular Gasoline
- 3.80 Great Britain
- 3.80 The Netherlands
- 3.74 Italy
- 3.69 Belgium
- 3.62 France
- 3.57 Germany
- 3.20 Japan
- 1.39 United States
- in U.S. dollars as of October 13, 1997
102History of Global Warming
- 1904 Swedish scientist Svante Arrhenius was,
according to NASA, "the first person to
investigate the effect that doubling atmospheric
carbon dioxide would have on global climate."
103History of Global Warming
- Arrhenius began studying rapid increases in
anthropogenic carbon emissions, determining
that "the slight percentage of carbonic acid in
the atmosphere may, by the advances of industry,
be changed to a noticeable degree in the course
of a few centuries."
104History of Global Warming
- The unique research of Arrhenius suggested that
this increase could be beneficial, making Earth's
climates "more equable" and stimulating plant
growth and food production. Until about 1960,
most scientists thought it implausible that
humans could actually affect average global
temperatures.
105History of Global Warming
- 1950s Geophysicist Roger Revelle, with the help
of Hans Suess, demonstrated that carbon dioxide
levels in the air had increased as a result of
the use of fossil fuels.
106History of Global Warming
- 1965 Serving on the President's Science Advisory
Committee Panel on Environmental Pollution in
1965, Roger Revelle helped publish the first
high-level government mention of global warming.
The book-length report identified many of the
environmental troubles the nation faced, and
mentioned in a "subpanel report" the potential
for global warming by carbon dioxide.
107History of Global Warming
- 1977 "In 1977 the nonpartisan National Academy
of Sciences issued a study called Energy and
Climate, which carefully suggested that the
possibility of global warming 'should lead
neither to panic nor to complacency.'
108History of Global Warming
- Rather, the study continued, it should 'engender
a lively sense of urgency in getting on with the
work of illuminating the issues that have been
identified and resolving the scientific
uncertainties that remain.'
109History of Global Warming
- As is typical with National Academy studies, the
primary recommendation was for more research."
From "Breaking the Global-Warming Gridlock" by
Daniel Sarewitz and Roger Pielke Jr., THE
ATLANTIC, July 2000
110History of Global Warming
- Roger Revelle chaired the National Academy Panel,
which found that about forty percent of the
anthropogenic carbon dioxide has remained in the
atmosphere, two-thirds from fossil fuel and
one-third from the clearing of forests. It is now
known that carbon dioxide is one of the primary
greenhouse gases that contributes to global
warming and remains in the atmosphere for a
century.
111History of Global Warming
- 1980s Representative Al Gore (D-TN), who had
been a student of Revelle's, co-sponsored the
first Congressional hearings to study the
implications of global warming and to encourage
the development of environmental technologies to
combat global warming.
112History of Global Warming
- 1982 Roger Revelle published a widely-read
article in SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN addressing the
rise in global sea level and the "relative role
played by the melting of glaciers and ice sheets
versus the thermal expansion of the warming
surface waters."
113History of Global Warming
- 1983 The Environmental Protection Agency
released a report detailing some of the possible
threats of the anthropogenic emission of carbon
dioxide.
114History of Global Warming
- 1988 NASA climate scientist James Hansen and his
team reported to Congress on global warming,
explaining, "the greenhouse warming should be
clearly identifiable in the 1990s" and that "the
temperature changes are sufficiently large to
have major impacts on people and other parts of
the biosphere, as shown by computed changes in
the frequency of extreme events and comparison
with previous climate trends."
115History of Global Warming
- With the increased awareness of global warming
issues, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) was established by the World
Meteorological Organization and the United
Nations Environment Programme to assess
scientific, technical and socio-economic
information relevant for the understanding of
climate change, its potential impacts and options
for adaptation and mitigation. The IPCC was the
first international effort of this scale to
address environmental issues.
116History of Global Warming
- 1990 Congress passed and President George Bush
signed Public Law 101-606 "The Global Change
Research Act of 1990. The purpose of the
legislation was "to require the establishment of
a United States Global Change Research Program
aimed at understanding and responding to global
change, including the cumulative effects of human
activities and natural processes on the
environment, to promote discussions towards
international protocols in global change
research, and for other purposes."
117History of Global Warming
- As part of the Act, the Global Change Research
Information Office (GCRIO) was established "to
disseminate to foreign governments, businesses,
and institutions, as well as citizens of foreign
countries, scientific research information
available in the United States which would be
useful in preventing, mitigating, or adapting to
the effects of global change. The office began
formal operation in 1993.
118History of Global Warming
- 1992 In June of 1992, over 100 government
leaders, representatives from 170 countries, and
some 30,000 participants met in Rio de Janeiro at
the U.N. Conference on Environment and
Development (UNCED or the "Earth Summit").
119History of Global Warming
- There, an international assembly formally
recognized the need to integrate economic
development and environmental protection into the
goal of sustainable development.
120History of Global Warming
- 1997 In December, 1997, more than 160 nations
met in Kyoto, Japan, to negotiate binding
limitations on greenhouse gases for the developed
nations, pursuant to the objectives of the
Framework Convention on Climate Change of 1992.
121History of Global Warming
- The outcome of the meeting was the Kyoto
Protocol, in which the developed nations agreed
to limit their greenhouse gas emissions, relative
to the levels emitted in 1990. The United States
agreed to reduce emissions from 1990 levels by 7
percent during the period 2008 to 2012.
122History of Global Warming
- 1997 In December, 1997, more than 160 nations
met in Kyoto, Japan, to negotiate binding
limitations on greenhouse gases for the developed
nations, pursuant to the objectives of the
Framework Convention on Climate Change of 1992.
123History of Global Warming
- The outcome of the meeting was the Kyoto
Protocol, in which the developed nations agreed
to limit their greenhouse gas emissions, relative
to the levels emitted in 1990. - The United States agreed to reduce emissions from
1990 levels by 7 percent during the period 2008
to 2012.
124History of Global Warming
- Also that year, the United States Senate
unanimously passed the Hagel-Byrd Resolution
notifying the Clinton Administration that the
Senate would not ratify any treaty that would (a)
impose mandatory greenhouse gas emissions
reductions for the United States without also
imposing such reductions for developing nations,
or (b) result in serious harm to our economy.
125History of Global Warming
- 2001 The IPCC released its third assessment
report, concluding on the basis of "new and
stronger evidence that most of the observed
warming over the last 50 years is attributable to
human activities." They also observed that "the
globally averaged surface temperature is
projected to increase by 1.4 to 5.8 degrees
Celsius over the period 1990 to 2100."
126History of Global Warming
- The same year, President George W. Bush announced
that the United States would not ratify the Kyoto
Protocol. The Protocol is now in limbo until one
of the two crucial holdouts Russia or the
United States will ratify the treaty.
127History of Global Warming
- 2003 Senator John McCain (R-AZ) and Senator
Joseph Lieberman (D-CT) co-sponsored a proposal
for mandatory caps on "greenhouse gas" emissions
from utilities and other industries.
128History of Global Warming
- Although the proposal was rejected in the Senate
by a margin of 55 to 43, it was the Senators'
first attempt to garner Senate attention for the
issue of global warming, and McCain and Lieberman
were encouraged by the support for the measure.