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Is Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide an Environmental Toxicant? Prof. Ankur R Desai Dept. Atmospheric & Oceanic Sciences Ankur of Desai, Atmospheric & Oceanic Sci., UW-Madison University Wisconsin-Madison CEE 698: Sustainabilityof Principles, Practices, and Paradoxes Feb 9, 2010 Colloquium in Environmental Toxicology, 16 March 2010 • • • • • Outline Why CO2 is not a pollutant The greenhouse gas story Climate change and ecosystems Why does that matter for climate policy and sustainable development? Why CO2 is a pollutant • • • • • Outline Why CO2 is not a pollutant The greenhouse gas story Climate change and ecosystems Why does that matter for climate policy and sustainable development? Why CO2 is a pollutant Our Era • From 1990-2005: – World Population increased 22% to ~6,500,000,000 people – Global oil consumption grew 25% to 85,000,000 barrels per day – Gross World Product (GWP) grew 40% to $59,380,000,000,000 US dollars – The number of threatened species increased 40% to ~16,000 • Population doubling times have increased – 1850-1930, 80 years, 1-2 billion – 1930-1975, 45 years, 2-4 billion – 1975-2015, 40 years, 4-8 billion Source: UCAR Our Carbon Economy 450 Global Energy Production 1850 to 1994 400 350 Exajoules per Year 300 250 200 150 Nuclear Hydro Gas Oil (feedstock) Oil Coal Wood CARBON! 100 50 18 50 18 56 18 62 18 68 18 74 18 80 18 86 18 92 18 98 19 04 19 10 19 16 19 22 19 28 19 34 19 40 19 46 19 52 19 58 19 64 19 70 19 76 19 82 19 88 19 94 0 Source: IEA Fossil Fuel Emissions • Courtesy K. Gurney, Purdue U. CO2! Global monthly average CO2 in parts per million (ppm) Source: NOAA ESRL Gradients Measuring Greenhouse Gases Does a Richer World Pollute Less? • Source: Nature • • • • • Questions Why CO2 is not a pollutant The greenhouse gas story Climate change and ecosystems Why does that matter for climate policy and sustainable development? Why CO2 is a pollutant What’s The Big Deal? IPCC, 4th AR, (2007) Living in a Greenhouse Infrared Solar Weather Land/Ocean Trenberth et al. (2009) Climate 101 • Earth’s climate is regulated by: – Solar “shortwave” input • Sun bathes earth primarily with visible light, which varies very little year to year on short timescales – Surface energy budget • Solar energy is reflected or converted into other forms of energy (photosynthate, longwave IR, heat, evaporation) – Atmospheric absorption and emission of surface and solar energy • Atmosphere is mostly transparent to solar energy but opaque to infrared and longer waves – Fluids that move energy around • Weather and ocean currents • Mainly affects spatio-temporal distribution Living in a Greenhouse The Atmospheric Window Smudging The Window A Global Experiment CO2 (ppm) 385 ppm (2008) 232 ppm Ice ages Years Before Present Source: Lüthi et al (2008), CDIAC, & Wikimedia Commons The Big Deal IPCC AR4 (2007) Recent Times Manifestations of the Big Deal Kucharik and Serbin (2009) The Future IPCC AR4 (2007) • • • • • Outline Why CO2 is not a pollutant The greenhouse gas story Climate change and ecosystems Why does that matter for climate policy and sustainable development? Why CO2 is a pollutant Since 1990 • Global annual CO2 emissions grew 25% to 27,000,000,000 tons of CO2 • CO2 in the atmosphere grew 10% to 385 ppm • At current rates, CO2 is likely to exceed 500 ppm sometime this century • But: Rate of atmospheric CO2 increase is about half the rate of emissions increase. Why? Where Is The Carbon Going? Houghton et al. (2007) Carbon Cycle Houghton et al. (2007) Ecosystems Will Respond A Story • Expectation: – Warmer Spring leads to a longer growing season for plants in high-elevation forests • Therefore: – Forest productivity in the Rocky Mountains should benefit from global warming That Makes Some Sense Later springs lead to lower productivity in U.S. northeastern forests Onset of Spring Anomaly (Days) • Richardson et al. (2009) It’s Getting Warmer Out There • April max monthly temperature trend 1971-2000 Courtesy of R. Behnke, UW; Data source: PRISM group It’s Getting Warmer Out There In spring, higher elevations are warming faster than lower • Courtesy of R. Behnke, UW Wait, What? • NEP = Net Ecosystem Production – Positive = more uptake Hu et al. (2010) SURPRISE! A Tower To Rule Them All A Flux Tower • NEE = Net Ecosystem Production – Positive = More productivity Courtesy of R. Monson, CU-Boulder Moisture Matters Hu et al. (2010) More Evidence Soil sfc Rain Soil 35 cm Groundwater Snowmelt WATER SNOW Hu et al. (2010) Snow Moisture Matters • Snow water drives a lot of productivity in Rocky Mountain subalpine forests Water Snow Hu et al. (2010) Water Snow Water Snow Morals • Warming temperatures are not necessarily a net positive for ecosystem productivity • Changes in moisture levels and snow matter in Western Forests Montaine subalpine forests Don’t Forget Bugs! Raffa et al. (2008) Pine Beetles Raffa et al (2008) Another Warming Feedback Courtesy of B. Stephens, NCAR Another Warming Feedback Mostly alive Mostly dead • Declining trend in atmospheric valley CO2? Courtesy of B. Stephens, NCAR Rate of Spread Beetle-Climate Feedback Spruce beetle Mountain Pine Beetle Raffa et al (2008) Atm. Chem, O3 Precipitation Temperature Aerosols GHGs NOx Heat CO2 Ecosystems H2O VOCs A Small Problem Friedlingstein et al. (2005) • • • • • Outline Why CO2 is not a pollutant The greenhouse gas story Climate change and ecosystems Why does that matter for climate policy and sustainable development? Why CO2 is a pollutant • Source: Nature Publishing Group Multi-Faceted Problem Does a Richer World Pollute Less? • Source: Nature Since 1990 • La Quere et al., 2009 It’s Not Impossible • Pacala and Socolow, 2004 Will The Carbon Economy Meet Its Own Demise? • • • • • Outline Why CO2 is not a pollutant The greenhouse gas story Climate change and ecosystems Why does that matter for climate policy and sustainable development? Why CO2 is a pollutant Why CO2 is a Pollutant • CO2 in and of itself is relatively benign and not very reactive – Lifetime of 100 years! • It’s the impact on radiative forcing and ocean acidification that matter • Ecosystems and society can adapt to slow, steady, small climate changes • Less likely with rapid changes and ecosystem surprises • There are many co-benefits of fossil fuel emission reduction with respect to tradition environmental toxicants! DISCUSS: As CO2 is an environmental toxicant, it requires that we move away from a carbon-energy economy immediately. - Principle: Anthropogenic climate destabilization is a significant threat to ecosystems and human civilizations. Sustainable development must aim to minimize climate damage. - Practice: Adopt climate mitigation and adaptation strategies in each sector of the economy that emits greenhouse gases. - Paradoxes and questions: - Every sector of the economy depends on a fossil fuel economy, where do we start? - Significant uncertainty in climate impacts requires us a adopt a probabilistic risk-based approach, but what is the right model? - Local, small changes don’t make a big difference; global action is mired in politics and bureaucracy - It’s hard to measure change. What if nothing happens? - Greenhouse gas mitigation and adaptation is likely to hamper the right of all people to lift the burden of poverty by economic development. Others argue that richer people are more likely to improve the environment. What to do? Acknowledgements • Desai Ecometeorology Lab (flux.aos.wisc.edu): • Funding partners: UW Graduate school, NSF, NOAA, USDA, NASA, DOE • Many, many collaborators • Wednesday Nite @ The Lab, UW Alumni Assoc.