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North American Carbon Sources and Sinks: Magnitude, Attribution and Uncertainty Anthony King Daniel Hayes Deborah Huntzinger Tristram West Wilfred Post.

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Presentation on theme: "North American Carbon Sources and Sinks: Magnitude, Attribution and Uncertainty Anthony King Daniel Hayes Deborah Huntzinger Tristram West Wilfred Post."— Presentation transcript:

1 North American Carbon Sources and Sinks: Magnitude, Attribution and Uncertainty Anthony King Daniel Hayes Deborah Huntzinger Tristram West Wilfred Post 4 th NACP All Investigators Meeting February 4, 2013 Albuquerque, New Mexico

2 The First State of the Carbon Cycle Report. SOCCR was Released as U.S. CCSP Synthesis and Assessment Product 2.2 The First State of the Carbon Cycle Report (SOCCR): North American Carbon Budget and Implications for the Global Carbon Cycle November 13, 2007 SOCCR CCSP SAP 2.2 State of the Carbon Cycle Report

3 National Climate Assessment  Currently in public review  Scheduled for publication in 2013  15. Interactions of Climate Change and Biogeochemical Cycles King, AW, DJ Hayes, DN Huntzinger, TO West, WM Post. Front Ecol Environ 2012; 10(10): 512–519, doi:10.1890/120066

4 Balance of sources and sinks Human activities have significantly altered the balance of sources that add CO 2 to the atmosphere and sinks that remove it. The result is a buildup of CO 2 in the atmosphere. Understanding the carbon cycle and human influence on sources and sinks is crucial to any effort to mitigate potential climate change by stabilizing atmospheric CO 2 concentrations.

5  North America is currently a net source of CO 2 to the atmosphere.  The combustion of fossil fuels in North America released nearly two billion metric tons of carbon to the atmosphere in 2003.  Fossil-fuel emissions are dominated by emissions from the United States (85% in 2003, Canada 9% and Mexico 6%).  Combustion of fossil fuel to produce energy commodities (primarily electricity) is the largest contributor (42% in 2003), transportation the second (31%).  Including the emissions from generating electricity used in buildings, the buildings sector of North America in 2003 was responsible for 37% of total North American carbon dioxide emissions and 10% of global emissions.  United States buildings alone were responsible for more carbon dioxide emissions than total carbon dioxide emissions of any other country in the world, except China SOCCR summary: The sources

6 Fossil fuel emissions --- the source

7 SOCCR summary: The sinks (ca 2003)  A terrestrial sink of 500 (  50%) Mt C per year removed the equivalent of nearly 30% of North American fossil fuel emissions in 2003.  The terrestrial sink is primarily associated with regrowing forests in the United States (  50% of the sink).  About 10% of the forest sink is in urban forests, with the urban forest sink equivalent to 1 to 3% of the North American fossil-fuel emissions in 2003.  The second largest sink, woody encroachment, is also the least well known.

8 Terrestrial sink (2000-2005): meta-synthesis of NACP regional interim synthesis

9 SOCCR sources and sinks:

10 Production and Consumption Sources and Sinks

11 Updated sources and sinks

12  North America is currently a net source of atmospheric CO 2 ; in the first 5 years of the 21st century, continental ecosystems annually absorbed the equivalent of only ~35% of the CO 2 from 2010 North American fossil-fuel emissions, a source-to-sink ratio of approximately 3:1.  Regrowing forests account for between 30% and 70% of the North American terrestrial sink for atmospheric CO 2.  Uncertainties in estimates of the size of the North American CO 2 sink remain high (about ± 50–80%); much of this uncertainty is associated with ecosystems (eg shrublands) that are excluded from forest and cropland inventories and with some model results.  Despite the high uncertainty associated with individual approaches, synthesis across alternatives yields more robust estimates of uncertainty (about ± 25%). In a nutshell…


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