Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byEric Sanders Modified over 9 years ago
1
CSI: Climate Status Investigations Teacher Training Institute April 16-21, 2008 Climate Change 101
2
Everything I know about climate change I learned at the movies… 20041995
3
Everything I know about climate change I learned at the movies… 200620041995
4
Presentation Outline The Greenhouse Effect Where Does Our Energy Come From? Emissions Correlation w/Monitored Climate Changes Future Trends
5
Source: EPA Global Warming site. http://yosemite.epa.gov/oar/globalwarming.nsf/content/climate.html
6
CO 2 CH 4 N2ON2OCF 4 SF 6 Global Warming Potential (GWP) 1213106,50023,900 Atmospheric Lifetime (years) 50-20012114>50,0003,200 Pre-industrial Concentration (ppm) 2800.7220.270400 Atmospheric Concentration (ppm) 3811.7740.319805.4 Rate of Concentration Change (ppm/yr) 1,6100.0050.00071.0 (ppt/yr) 0.23 (ppt/yr) Effects of Different Greenhouse Gases Source: US EPA: US Greenhouse Gas Inventory Reports 2008 http://epa.gov/climatechange/emissions/usinventoryreport.html
7
CONVERSION CHARTS 1 unit carbon (C) = 3.6667 or 44/12 units carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) 1 unit CO 2 = 0.2727 or 12/44 units C Converting methane (CH 4 ) and nitrous oxide (N 2 O) to equivalent CO 2 and C units: Global Warming Potential (GWP) of CO 2 = 1 GWP of CH 4 = 21 (over 100-year time period -- IPCC Third Assessment Report) GWP of N 2 O = 310 (over 100-year time period -- IPCC Third Assessment Report) EXAMPLE: (100 metric tons of N 2 O)x(310) = 31,000 metric tons of CO 2 Equivalents x 12/44 = 8,454 metric tons of Carbon Equivalents x 2204/2000 = 9,316 short tons C Converting mass units (e.g., short tons, metric tons, teragrams) 1 metric ton (tonne) = 1,000 kilograms (kg) = 2,204 lbs 1 short ton = 0.9072 metric tons = 2,000 lbs 1 Teragram (Tg) = 10 12 grams = 1 million (10 6 ) metric tons 1 Gigaton (Gt) = 1 Petagram (Pg) = 10 15 grams = 1 billion (10 9 ) metric tons
8
Presentation Outline The Greenhouse Effect Where Does Our Energy Come From? Emissions Correlation w/Monitored Climate Changes Future Trends
9
Fossil Fuels World’s Dominant Energy Source United States (2005) 100 QBtu/yr (1.06e14 MJ) 86% Fossil Energy World (2005) 462 Quads/yr (4.87e14 MJ) 86% Fossil Energy World Data from International Energy Outlook 2007 http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/ieo/world.html. U.S. Data from Annual Energy Outlook 2008 http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/aeo/fuel.html Coal 26% Coal 26% Oil 37% Gas 23% Nuclear 6% Gas 23% Nuclear 8% Oil 41% Hydro 3% Other renewable (solar, wind, geothermal, biomass) 3% Renewables 8% Coal 23% Coal 23%
10
Renewables 6% 100 Quads Fossil fuels provide 86% of energy 2005 2030 131 Quads By 2030, reliance on fossil fuels remains stable at 86% Coal 23% Nuclear 8% Renewables 6% Oil 41% Gas 23% Coal 26% Nuclear 7% Oil 40% Gas 20% + 31% Source: AEO 2007 Fossil Energy - America’s Energy Foundation
11
6.3 Quads 2005 2030 13.7 Quads + 118% Source: AEO 2008 Renewable Energy Consumption – Growing Fast, But From a Small Base
12
Presentation Outline The Greenhouse Effect Where Does Our Energy Come From? Emissions Correlation with Monitored Climate Changes Future Trends
13
All Fossil Fuels & Energy Sectors Contribute CO 2 Emissions Industry 29% Industry 29% Commercial 18% Commercial 18% Residential 21% Transportation 32% Transportation 32% Oil 44% Oil 44% Coal 36% Coal 36% Natural Gas 20% AEO2007 United States Carbon Dioxide Emissions (By Source & Sector)
14
CO 2 & CH 4 - The Primary GHG Contributors Methane 9% Nitrous Oxide 5% HFCs, PFCs, SF 6 2% CO 2 from Energy 83% Other CO 2 2% “EIA Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the U.S.: 2005” United States Greenhouse Gas Emissions (Equivalent Global Warming Basis)
15
World Carbon Dioxide Emissions By Region, 2001-2025 (Million Metric Tons of C Equivalent) Carbon Intensity By Region, 2001-2025 (Metric Tons of C Equivalent per Million $1997) …But Carbon Dioxide Emissions are Growing Carbon Intensity is Falling…
16
Different Concentration Levels are Possible Source: Dave Hawkins, NRDC, presented at Keystone Energy Forum, Feb. 2004
17
Stabilization Requires a Budget ppm Billion tonnes Carbon (1900-2100) Source: Dave Hawkins, NRDC, presented at Keystone Energy Forum, Feb. 2004
18
The Budget is Disappearing Cumulative carbon emissions 1900-2100 (GtC) Budget for 450 ppm Stabilization Spent Remaining Source: Dave Hawkins, NRDC, presented at Keystone Energy Forum, Feb. 2004
19
Presentation Outline The Greenhouse Effect Where Does Our Energy Come From? Emissions Correlation with Monitored Climate Changes Future Trends
20
Atmospheric Concentrations are Rising…
21
CO 2 Concentrations On The Rise (~280 ppm to 370 ppm over last 100 years) Temperature Change from Present ( o C) Time Before Present (kyr) CO 2 Concentration (ppmv) 20015050 350 300 250 200 1000 2 0 -2 -4 T atm (Vostok) CO 2 (Vostok)
23
Source: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change - http://www.ipcc.ch/present/graphics.htm
24
Presentation Outline The Greenhouse Effect Where Does Our Energy Come From? Emissions Correlation w/Monitored Climate Changes Future Trends
25
Possible harbingers… Rising sea levels Spreading disease Earlier spring arrival Plant and animal range shifts and population changes Coral reef bleaching Permafrost melting Downpours, heavy snowfalls, and flooding Droughts and fires
28
Source: http://www.arctic.noaa.gov and National Climatic Data Center, NOAAhttp://www.arctic.noaa.gov Permafrost and polar ice are melting…
29
Source: National Climatic Data Center, NOAA Precipitation is erratic
30
Significant Climate Anomalies Source: National Climatic Data Center, NOAA
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.