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Prior to Start of Session 5 Start your computers Launch browser Login to Changing Planet web portal –

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Presentation on theme: "Prior to Start of Session 5 Start your computers Launch browser Login to Changing Planet web portal –"— Presentation transcript:

1 Prior to Start of Session 5 Start your computers Launch browser Login to Changing Planet web portal – http://communities.earthportal.org/changingclimate http://communities.earthportal.org/changingclimate Look in session 5 of “Workshop Notebook” and download “Spreadsheet for CO2 decomposition.” Open the spreadsheet and minimize its window Keep your browser and the spreadsheet open – we’ll use them during the session

2 Greenhouse Gases Past, Present and Future Session 5(a) Neil Leary Changing Planet Study Group July 19-22, 2010 Cooling the Liberal Arts Curriculum A NASA-GCCE Funded Project

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6 Source: UNEP, GRID/Arendal, Vital Climate Graphics, http://www.grida.no/publications/vg/climate/ Carbon Cycle

7 “Keeling Curve.” Average monthly CO2 concentration (red) and 12 month moving average (blue). This figure was created by Robert Rohde from published data.

8 Industrial revolution and the atmosphere Carbon dioxideMethane Nitrous Oxide Source: IPCC 2007, WGI, Figure SPM-1.

9 Last Ice Age Last Interglacial 350 300 250 200 Carbon Dioxide (ppmv) 6005004003002001000 Thousands of Years Before Present [Adapted from Figure 6.3, © IPCC 2007: WG1-AR4] CO 2 Concentration

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11 All GHG emissions in CO 2 e, excluding emissions from land-use change and forestry.

12 Per Capita CO 2 Emissions Source: World Bank online database, 2004

13 CO 2 emissions growth, 1990-2005 Excludes emissions from land use change and forestry. Source: WRI-CAIT database, July 2010, http://cait.wri.org/

14 IPCC Scenario Storylines Source: derived from IPCC SRES, 2000.

15 Projections of CO 2 Emissions and Concentrations Source: IPCC, 2001, WGI Report, Figure 5

16 Projections of GHG Emissions and Changes in Global Mean Surface Temperature Source: IPCC, 2007, Synthesis Report, Figure SPM-5

17 Source: IPCC 2001, Synthesis Report, Figure SPM-10b

18 CAIT/WRI Climate Analysis Indicators Tool Login to CAIT: http://cait.wri.org/ http://cait.wri.org/ Explore data and tools using navigation bar on left

19 Download and graph data Click “Countries & Regions” Select “Countries” Highlight 10 countries Click [>>] Select “Display My Countries/Regions” Click [Save Changes]

20 Get data for CO 2, CO 2 w/ LUCF, All GHGs Select “GHG Emissions” Use buttons to select CO2. Sort list of countries alphabetically Select “Download” Open the downloaded spreadsheet – Look in downloads folder Repeat for CO2 w/ LUCF Repeat for All GHGs Copy emissions data into one spreadsheet

21 Source: chart constructed with data from WRI-CAIT database, July 2010, http://cait.wri.org/.

22 Top 10 emitters: total, per capita and per $ gdp RankCO2 Total from EnergyCO2 per capitaCO2/$GDP 1USAQatarNauru 2ChinaKuwaitUzbekistan 3EU (27)UAEN Korea 4Russian FedBahrainTurkmenistan 5JapanLuxembourgSerbia & Mont 6IndiaUSAMongolia 7GermanyTrinidad & TobKazakhstan 8CanadaAustraliaUkraine 9UKCanadaChina 10S KoreaSaudi ArabiaIraq*

23 Essential principles of GHGs (1) (Or: what should our students learn?) CO 2, CH 4, N 2 O have natural & human sources Human sources: mostly burning fossil energy, clearing land, agriculture Emissions have grown rapidly since mid-19 th century Capacity of Earth systems to process has been exceeded; concentrations growing. – CO 2 concentration now higher than past 800k years or longer – Stabilizing emissions will not stabilize concentrations Emissions growth driven by population, per capita income, energy intensity, carbon intensity

24 Essential principles of GHGs (2) (Or: what should our students learn?) 25 countries responsible for 80% of emissions Developed countries account for majority of past & current emissions – Emissions growth most rapid in developing world; will exceed developed countries soon – Per capita emissions several times lower! Emission profiles differ in North and South – North: CO 2 from energy – South: significant CH 4, N 2 O from land use, agriculture If no agreement to cut global emissions, GHGs will warm planet 1-6 o C by 2100

25 Useful Resources WRI website: www.wri.orgwww.wri.org – CAIT and CAIT-US databases & tools – Baumert, Herzog, Pershing (2005) – EarthTrends database USEPA website: www.epa.gov/climatechange/www.epa.gov/climatechange/ – Official inventories of US GHG emissions – Lots of other information about climate change

26 Extra Slides

27 Global mean radiative forcings in 2005 relative to 1750 with 90% confidence intervals (W m -2 ). Source: IPCC 2007 WG1, Figure 2.20

28 Source: Baumert, Herzog and Pershing, 2005.

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30 IPCC (2007), Figure 5, WG1 SPM

31 IPCC (2007), chapter 10, Figure 10.8. Multi-model mean annual surface warming relative to 1980-1999

32 IPCC (2007), Figure 7 SPM. Multi-model average changes in DJF and JJA precipitation for 2090-2099 relative to 1980-1999.

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34 Source: IPCC 2007, WGIII Report, Figure SPM-2 Global trends in CO2 emissions, income, population, energy intensity and carbon intensity

35 Kaya Identity & decomposition CO2 = Pop x GDP/Pop x E/GDP x C/E Emissions = population x per capita income x energy intensity x carbon intensity For small changes: % Δ CO2 = % Δ population + % Δ per capita income + % Δ energy intensity +% Δ carbon intensity


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