The danger of overvaluing methane’s influence on future climate change

Minimizing the future impacts of climate change requires reducing the greenhouse gas (GHG) load in the atmosphere. Anthropogenic emissions include many types of GHG’s as well as particulates such as black carbon and sulfate aerosols, each of which has a different effect on the atmosphere, and a diff...

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Veröffentlicht in:Climatic change 2013-10, Vol.120 (4), p.903-914
Hauptverfasser: Shoemaker, Julie K., Schrag, Daniel P.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Minimizing the future impacts of climate change requires reducing the greenhouse gas (GHG) load in the atmosphere. Anthropogenic emissions include many types of GHG’s as well as particulates such as black carbon and sulfate aerosols, each of which has a different effect on the atmosphere, and a different atmospheric lifetime. Several recent studies have advocated for the importance of short timescales when comparing the climate impact of different climate pollutants, placing a high relative value on short-lived pollutants, such as methane (CH 4 ) and black carbon (BC) versus carbon dioxide (CO 2 ). These studies have generated confusion over how to value changes in temperature that occur over short versus long timescales. We show the temperature changes that result from exchanging CO 2 for CH 4 using a variety of commonly suggested metrics to illustrate the trade-offs involved in potential carbon trading mechanisms that place a high value on CH 4 emissions. Reducing CH 4 emissions today would lead to a climate cooling of approximately ~0.5 °C, but this value will not change greatly if we delay reducing CH 4 emissions by years or decades. This is not true for CO 2 , for which the climate is influenced by cumulative emissions. Any delay in reducing CO 2 emissions is likely to lead to higher cumulative emissions, and more warming. The exact warming resulting from this delay depends on the trajectory of future CO 2 emissions but using one business-as usual-projection we estimate an increase of 3/4 °C for every 15-year delay in CO 2 mitigation. Overvaluing the influence of CH 4 emissions on climate could easily result in our “locking” the earth into a warmer temperature trajectory, one that is temporarily masked by the short-term cooling effects of the CH 4 reductions, but then persists for many generations.
ISSN:0165-0009
1573-1480
DOI:10.1007/s10584-013-0861-x