See the Tabbed Pages for links to video tutorials, and a linked list of post titles grouped by topic.

This blog is expressly directed to readers who do not have strong training or backgrounds in science, with the intent of helping them grasp the underpinnings of this important issue. I'm going to present an ongoing series of posts that will develop various aspects of the science of global warming, its causes and possible methods for minimizing its advance and overcoming at least partially its detrimental effects.

Each post will begin with a capsule summary. It will then proceed with captioned sections to amplify and justify the statements and conclusions of the summary. I'll present images and tables where helpful to develop a point, since "a picture is worth a thousand words".

Friday, December 23, 2011

Carbon Capture and Storage: A Needed yet Unproven Technology

Summary. Carbon capture and storage (or sequestration; CCS) is contemplated as a major group of technologies that would contribute to reducing the rate of emission of carbon dioxide (CO2), a major greenhouse gas, in future decades.  Currently there are a handful of operating or demonstration CCS facilities worldwide.  CCS entails capturing CO2 from a utility-scale source that burns a fossil fuel such as coal or natural gas; transporting the purified CO2 to a storage site, and injecting or piping the CO2 into the storage or sequestering formation.  Many problems remain to make CCS industrially viable for utility-scale facilities.  Resolving these problems requires investment of large sums of money, worldwide, to arrive at practical CCS by about 2020.  Successful development of CCS will make a major contribution to addressing the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and reducing the extent of increase of the long-term global average temperature.

The development expenditures should be undertaken by nations around the world in recognition of the fact that, to date, mankind has not treated the disposal of CO2 as a waste disposal obligation.  This contrasts with the way we deal with municipal and sanitary waste streams, where inhabitants are fully accustomed to pay for disposal either directly or as a tax burden. 

Introduction.  The nations of the world consume ever more amounts of fossil fuels each year to produce the energy they require.  Burning fossil fuels releases the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide into the atmosphere in correspondingly increasing amounts year by year.  Although emitted by myriad point sources, greenhouse gases are rapidly distributed in the atmosphere across the entire surface of the globe.  CO2 is long-lived in the atmosphere, since there are insufficient natural mechanisms for removing the gas, once emitted.   Indeed, the atmospheric concentration of CO2 has been increasing steadily, and more strongly, in recent decades, and is now higher than at any time since the beginning of the industrial revolution. 

Future projections for fossil fuel use and the resulting emission rate of CO2 are even higher, as developing nations increase their demand for energy, and as the population of the world expands.  As the greenhouse effect from these accumulating greenhouse gases gets stronger, the long-term global average temperature likewise increases, leading to serious changes in regional climates and to intense extremes of distinct weather events that lead to damages and harms for the affected populations. 

For all these reasons climate scientists and policy makers around the world are grappling with ways to reduce the rate of greenhouse gas emissions, as one way to reduce the severity of the warming of the planet, and ultimately to try to stabilize the planet’s climate.

Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS), also called carbon capture and sequestration, has long been discussed as a way of potentially preventing the release of CO2 once formed in energy production.  The term actually applies to the overall concept, since, as described below, there is an ensemble of CCS technologies that are being developed. 

CCS is widely mentioned as being an important means for abatement of CO2 emissions as we strive to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the coming decades.  For example, the European Union (see this earlier post) has set the objective of reducing emissions by at least 80% by 2050, and includes CCS as part of its strategy.  The state of California has established a similar objective.  A nonofficial report, “California’s
Energy Future: The View to 2050” by the California Council on Science and Technology likewise relies strongly on CCS to achieve this goal.  It is therefore important to understand the present status of development of CCS.

It is roughly estimated that overall, around the world, there exists sufficient geological (i.e., other than in oceans) capacity to store 10,000 gigatons (billions of tons) of CO2, considered to be sufficient for 100 years of storage activity or more.  By far the highest capacity is found in deep brine formations (see below).

General features of CCS.  Since large facilities are required for CCS, it is appropriate only for use with fixed energy plants that rely on fossil fuels.  The objective of CCS is to capture CO2 produced in energy production before it is released into the atmosphere, and to store it permanently out of contact with the atmosphere (sequestration).  Although some fixed energy plants may be sited appropriately for sequestration on site, in most cases the site where the CO2 is captured is remote from the sequestration site, so that the CO2 must be transported in order to reach a storage site.

There are important requirements for a CCS technology.  First, it must effectively and efficiently remove or capture CO2 from a flue gas obtained from the fossil fuel.  Second, the CO2 must in general be transported to a remote sequestration site with minimal risk of release into the atmosphere.  Third, the CO2 has to be stored in a way that sequesters it from release back into the atmosphere for, say, one hundred or more years, and preferably for millennia.  Finally, CCS must be accomplished as economically as possible in order to minimize market resistance by the consumer.

The technologies deployed in CCS are explained below in the Details section following Conclusions.

Stages of development of CCS technologies.  Examples of the various CCS technologies are at various stages of development or implementation.  CO2 has been used industrially for many years in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) with the objective not of storing CO2, but rather extracting additional crude petroleum from wells for energy.  Generally, most of the methods summarized in Details use technologies that, individually, are already known.  The challenge for CCS is to combine them to successfully achieve the current objective, to scale them to the extent needed for the amounts of CO2 product envisioned, and to achieve all this economically.  In addition, certain of the technologies have further research, development and deployment obstacles facing them, some of which are mentioned below.

Economics of CCS.  When considering economics, we have to realize that the more steps, or unit operations, that are involved in a technology, the more costly it becomes.  This is especially so because additional energy, compared to a non-CCS plant, has to be invested in some steps in order to proceed to the next step.  This is illustrated in the following graphic.

Conceptual diagram of additional costs, and additional CO2 burden, arising in a CCS technology.  The upper panel schematically shows the additional costs arising from equipment and loss of efficiency.  The lower panel illustrates a conceptual accounting of the additional CO2 required for operation of a CCS plant.  The third line for “CO2 captured” accounts for the fractional efficiency of the capture step (ca 80%).
Source: Ref. 1.

Power plant generation efficiency can span a range of about 42% to about 55%, depending on the technology used.  When comparable technologies include CCS, It is estimated that losses of roughly 14% in efficiency from these numbers can occur.  Or, considered from the point of view of the graphic above, depending on the technology and the particular features of a given installation, the cost of the “CO2 captured” line (third line in the lower panel) can range from US$44 to US$90 per ton of CO2 captured.  In a separate analysis, it is estimated that the cost per megawatt-hour (unit of energy provided) increases by 75-78% using CCS for pulverized coal combustion, or by 39% for IGCC (Ref. 1).

These figures may appear alarming to the consuming public.  However, it must be realized that the cost of treating CO2 as a waste product of the lifestyle that we humans lead has never been included in the price of the fossil fuels used in its creation (see this previous post).  This contrasts with the ready willingness in developed countries of the world, to pay, for example, for waste water treatment facilities or for disposal of solid residential and commercial waste.  The need to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, principally but not exclusively CO2, in order to address the adverse effects of global warming necessarily involves expenses that society must bear. 

Implementation of CCS.  Presently CCS technologies remain experimental.  The following graphic shows a world-wide map of sites where CCS is being implemented on a research, a development, or a deployment basis.

Active or planned large-scale integrated projects by capture facility, storage type and region.  The numbers refer to labels in the text of the original.
(Original Source: Global CCS Institute 2010)
Source: Ref. 1.

An important aspect of the graphic above is that the enumerated label numbers do not even reach 100.  (Ref. 1 also includes an accompanying map restricted to the U. S. and Canada.)  In other words, these are the principal “active or planned” large scale CCS projects identified worldwide.  This shows clearly that at this time CCS is not anywhere near having reached maturity as an ensemble of technologies that can be implemented to sequester CO2 to a meaningful extent.  Four large scale CCS facilities are currently in operation, successfully sequestering CO2 at this time.

Unfulfilled needs required for research, development and deployment of CCS.

Ref. 1 points out that, in comparison with earlier assessments by the Carbon Sequestration Leadership Forum, progress is being made.  For example, it states that a group of developed countries has pledged US$26 billion that can fund between 19 and 43 large scale demonstration projects by 2020.

Ref. 1 includes a long section detailing gaps in our present state of understanding or capability in CCS.  A short selection of these needs is listed here.

There is a strong need for several large-scale CCS projects in order to demonstrate technical and commercial capability to achieve sequestration,  helping attain the objective of being a viable technology by 2020.  The scale of the projects needs to be large enough to accommodate the output of today’s power generating facilities.

Pipeline networks need to be planned and constructed to transport CO2 between a power facility and its storage location. 

Research and development is needed to adequately and properly identify suitable storage sites that fulfill the requirements of the industry.

There is a need to expand CO2 capture from power plants to other large industrial facilities, such as cement factories and steel mills.

New research modules need to be developed to consider the technologies and their associated costs for the entire CCS process train, and for the entire perceived life cycle of installed facilities.

The costs of the CO2 capture process are the highest in the CCS technology.  New methods for capture need to be identified to help make it more efficient and economical.  These must be tested at scale for implementation.

Conclusions

CCS has the potential to play a major role in lowering the rate of emission of greenhouse gases in coming decades.  As such, CCS is a technology that attracts interest and development efforts worldwide.  A factor of paramount importance is that, to the extent it becomes a viable set of technologies, CCS would permit mankind to continue burning fossil fuels.  With present capabilities up to 80% of the resulting CO2 will be removed from the effluent gas stream and stored out of contact with the atmosphere for long periods of time.  Thus even with CCS, greenhouse gases would continue to accumulate in the atmosphere, albeit it a considerably lower rate.

Unfortunately, the present status of CCS has not reached a level at which it can be implemented on a scale sufficient to fulfill the need.  Considerable efforts in research, development and full-scale deployment are needed to achieve this objective.

These efforts will require the expenditure of large sums of money, originating from greenhouse gas-emitting countries the world over.  Once emitted from a source, greenhouse gases are distributed across the entire planet, becoming a matter of global concern.  Correspondingly, technologies contributing to resolving global warming should be addressed by nations around the world.  Progress by one becomes shared progress for all.

Funding support for deploying CCS should come from governments, as well as possibly from public-private joint efforts.  Adequate support should be given to encourage private enterprise to undertake investments in presumably risky ventures entailed in deploying CCS. 

Installing facilities that include CCS capabilities necessarily increases the cost of the energy obtained from them.  As consumers of the energy generated by burning fossil fuels, we have become accustomed not to think about our energy sources.  After all, we can’t see or smell CO2; fossil fuels provide “invisible energy”.    We should instead consider the costs of disposing of CO2 as a waste product just as we do for municipal and sanitary waste streams. 

The harms to humanity arising from use of fossil fuels are significant, considering, for example, recent extremes of weather and climate scattered across the globe.  These harms create the need to expend large sums of money for remediation and relief on an emergency, and unscheduled, basis.  As an alternative, we should consider accepting the expenses of restricting the emission of greenhouse gases as a preventive measure.  

Details

There are three principal technologies under study for capturing CO2, post-combustion capture, pre-combustion capture, and metal oxide capture.  In addition, there are several technologies for storing the captured CO2 (see the following graphic), including on-land or offshore  injection into deep brine aquifers, on-land or offshore injection into existing oil wells frequently as part of a method for enhancing oil recovery, and injection into coal seams that cannot be exploited commercially as sources for coal. 

Schematic diagram of options for storing CO2 in deep underground geological formations [(Courtesy Cooperative Research Centre for Greenhouse Gas Technologies, Australia)]
Source: © IPCC, 2005, Ref. 2.


In addition, direct release into ocean waters is also under consideration (see graphic below), involving pipeline release onto the deep ocean floor (CO2 lakes, sinking CO2 plumes), pipeline release at shallow depths (rising CO2 plumes), and release from ships or ocean platforms by pipe injection (CO2 lakes).

                               Some strategies for storing CO2 in ocean waters.
                               Source: © IPCC, 2005, Ref. 2.

Post-combustion capture.  In this technology, a fossil fuel such as coal or natural gas is first burned to release its energy, typically in an electric generation plant.  When burned in air, the resulting CO2 is relatively dilute in the flue gas, making its recovery slightly more challenging.  The flue gas is passed through an amine composition that combines chemically with the CO2 while letting other components pass without capture.  The amine capture proceeds spontaneously and includes the release of heat during the reaction.  In the next step the compounded mixture now has to be heated sufficiently to reverse this combination and release pure CO2, simultaneously regenerating the free amine for re-use.  The CO2 finally obtained at this stage is essentially pure, ready for transport and sequestration.  As with all the CCS technologies, here the post-combustion capture step reduces the overall energy yield by significant amounts (the “Efficiency penalty” in the upper panel in the first graphic above).

A variation of this method burns the fuel in enriched or pure oxygen (oxyfuel combustion).  But oxygen can only be provided by ultra-low temperature fractionation of air into oxygen and nitrogen at cryogenic temperatures.  This step obviously requires additional energy for its operation, detracting from the overall energy yield.  The advantage of this method is that the flue gas itself has a high concentration of CO2, making the capture step more effective and efficient, thus lowering the cost of this step.  Oxyfuel combustion has to date only been implemented on a small demonstration scale.

Pre-combustion capture is primarily used with coal, and is based on the earlier “syn-gas” (synthetic gas) method developed some decades ago.  This technology is also called integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) power generation.  The details may be too complicated to explain fully here.  In several steps pulverized coal is converted to a gas stream containing CO2 and hydrogen gas (gasification).  The hydrogen is burned in air to produce hot gas containing water vapor that drives a first generating turbine.  The excess heat in the gas stream is used to generate steam which then drives a second generating turbine (combined cycle).  The CO2 is captured and isolated for storage.

Metal oxide capture involves mixing natural gas with a metal oxide to yield CO2 and pure metal; the latter is reoxidized in air for re-use. 

Other capture modalities are also under investigation.

Transport is envisioned primarily to occur by pipeline.  CO2 is readily compressed to a liquid at ordinary temperatures.  Liquid CO2 has been sent by pipeline already in the U. S. in EOR applications; there are a few thousand miles of such pipelines already in use.  Liquefied CO2 can also be transported by truck or by sea.  Any leaks that may occur are potentially dangerous or lethal because of the hazard of asphyxiation.

Deep brine injection.  Concentrated brines exist in deep aquifers (see the schematic for geologic storage above) throughout the world.  The important feature of usable brine aquifers is that they be overlain with a layer of impermeable “caprock”.  This caprock is a mineral that does not allow escape of liquid or gaseous CO2 into overlying geological layers.  Depending on the brine and mineral characteristics of the adjacent geology, injected CO2 could react to form insoluble carbonate minerals that would have essentially infinite lifetimes in situ.

Oil well injection, depleted natural gas reservoir injection.  Injection into existing oil wells is used already in EOR.  While this would serve to sequester CO2 underground, it may be considered counterproductive from the point of view of minimizing global warming, since additional fossil fuel is forced up the well in the process and would result in additional CO2 being emitted upon combustion.  Depleted natural gas reservoirs pose less concern in this regard because much less residual gas remains.  Both oil and gas reservoirs most likely are overlain with suitable caprock formations, since the reservoirs remained intact for millions of years.  They thus are highly unlikely to leak CO2 back into the atmosphere or into potable water aquifers.

“Un-mineable” coal seams are considered to occur too deep or be otherwise unsatisfactory for commercial mining.  Coal seams can absorb injected CO2 and store the gas for long times.  Coal seams frequently contain methane (natural gas), a much stronger greenhouse gas than CO2.  Injected CO2 can expel methane to the surface, which would exacerbate greenhouse gas concerns, or expelled methane can be harvested as a fuel in which case the natural gas would carry the same concerns as mentioned above for recovered crude oil.

Ocean injection directly into sea water is also mentioned as a storage modality.  Deep ocean injection could occur from ships, stationary platforms, or pipelines originating on land (see the schematic for geologic storage above).  If deep enough, the ocean pressure and temperature keep the CO2 liquefied, and it sinks to the bottom to form CO2 lakes.  Escape from these lakes would occur slowly only by diffusion.  Shallow injection on the other hand would not keep the CO2 liquefied, and it would dissolve or rise.

The principal hazard with ocean injection is that, CO2 being a weak acid, any CO2 that enters the general ocean body would increase its acidity.  The oceans are already being subjected to acidification by absorption of atmospheric CO2 at the surface, leading, it is thought, to loss of coral reefs and shellfish, which disrupts the entire oceanic ecosystem.  It may not be advisable to risk further acidification by ocean injection of liquid CO2.

References

  1. Carbon Sequestration Leadership Forum 2011 Technology Roadmap; http://www.cslforum.org/aboutus/index.html?cid=nav_about.

  1. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), 2005: IPCC Special Report on Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage. Prepared by Working Group III of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [Metz, B., O. Davidson, H. C. de Coninck, M. Loos, and L. A. Meyer (eds.)]. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA, 442 pp. http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/special-reports/srccs/srccs_wholereport.pdf

  1. Carbon Sequestration Program: Technology Program Plan, National Energy Technology Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy, 2011 http://www.netl.doe.gov/technologies/carbon_seq/refshelf/2011_Sequestration_Program_Plan.pdf .

© 2011 Henry Auer

Monday, December 12, 2011

Durban Platform Agreement Concludes 2011 Climate Change Talks

Summary.  This year’s UNFCCC conference to negotiate a climate change treaty convened in Durban, South Africa.  On December 11, 2011 the attending parties agreed to the Durban Platform, embodying new climate change objectives.  For the first time, agreement was reached to negotiate a legally binding world-wide treaty to limit greenhouse gas emissions.  The objective is to complete the negotiations by 2015, and to implement them by 2020.  Unfortunately, these dates are greatly extended from earlier timelines.  They permit greenhouse gases to be emitted unconstrained and to continue accumulating in the earth’s atmosphere without sanctions in the interim.  Because of the delay, climate scientists are concerned that the global average temperature will increase considerably more than previously hoped.  This would mean severe changes in climate and weather, leading to increased numbers and severity of extreme weather events.

Introduction.  Following up on the 2010 Cancun conference, this year’s meeting under the U. N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) took place in Durban, South Africa from Nov. 28 to Dec. 11 (an unscheduled extension of two days was needed to reach a conclusion).  The principal objective had been to negotiate a successor agreement to the Kyoto Protocol (see this post), originally concluded in 1997, and which expires at the end of 2012.  It covers only “developed” countries such as the U. S., Europe and Japan, but the U. S. Senate unanimously refused to ratify the pact so that the U. S. in fact has not been bound by its terms.  The Kyoto Protocol went into effect in 2005.  Under its terms, most participating states undertook to reduce man-made greenhouse gas emissions below their emission levels of 1990 by 8%, during the commitment period, 2008-2012. 

Another goal was to negotiate implementation of commitments made last year at the Cancun conference on funding adaptation efforts, verifying greenhouse gas emissions, and reforestation.

The Kyoto Protocol specifically excludes developing countries of the world from its terms. In 1997 developing countries had very low levels of economic activity, and emitted very small amounts of greenhouse gases (mainly carbon dioxide).  Since then, however, the principal developing countries, such as China and India, have expanded dramatically, and have become major contributors to man-made greenhouse gas emissions.  China overtook the U. S. in total amount of emissions around 2009, and now emits the most of any country on earth.

Developing countries have argued that the economically advanced countries had been burning fossil fuels, generating greenhouse gases, for more than a century as they reached their present state of economic well-being.  Developing countries insisted that they too should have the opportunity, if not be granted the right, to use fossil fuels to similar extents in order to develop their economies along similar paths.   That is, they object to being placed under future restrictions affecting their growth because of the past history of greenhouse gas emissions from the industrialized countries of the West.

China’s position, for example, in recent years has been that the terms of any new accord be based on carbon intensity, i.e., the amount of greenhouse gas emitted per unit of economic activity (e.g., gross domestic product), rather than the absolute amount of emissions.  As measured in this way, China’s greenhouse gas intensity has been trending lower year-by-year, although China  still continues pouring more and more absolute amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

The “Durban Platform”.  After 2 days of intense negotiations extending beyond the scheduled end of the conference, the parties agreed to the new “Durban Platform” (see References below for sources).  As had been foreseen before the conference began (see this post) agreement on a specific format for an agreement after 2012 to follow the expiration of the Kyoto Protocol was not reached.  Rather, it was agreed that negotiations to reach a formal agreement by 2015, to take effect no later than 2020, would start now.  It is felt that the Durban agreement represents a significant positive departure from earlier agreements such as the Kyoto Protocol, and the Cancun Agreements of last year.  A major stipulation of the Platform, to be incorporated into the treaty to be negotiated, is that all parties would be legally bound to abide by emission limits agreed to in the treaty. 

This represents an important positive step over the voluntary efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions that were incorporated into the Cancun Agreements (reported here).  It would bring major emitters from the developing world such as China and India, on the one hand, and the U. S., currently not bound by the Kyoto Protocol, on the other, under the same legal framework for reducing emissions and limiting the accumulation of atmospheric greenhouse gases.  This feature is a crucial concession from both sides of the emissions argument granted in reaching the platform agreement.  Indeed, the U. S. special envoy on climate change, Todd Stern, expressed misgivings about undertaking an initiative that would likely encounter opposition in the U. S. Congress.  He stated “This is a very significant package. None of us likes everything in it. Believe me, there is plenty the United States is not thrilled about.”  Yet he understood that the Platform incorporates important new features that would fall apart if all parties did not buy into them.  In this regard, the Yale University Project on Climate Change Communication reports that, based on a nationwide U. S. survey taken in November 2011, 21% strongly support, and 45% somewhat support, signing a treaty that requires the U. S. to cut emissions of carbon dioxide by 90% by the year 2050.

Additionally, the Durban Platform included an agreement to extend the Kyoto Protocol for five years beyond its expiration in 2012.  Currently only the European Union has an emissions reduction “roadmap” already in place (see this post). It has set the goal of reducing its greenhouse gas emissions by 20% below the levels of 1990 by the year 2020, to increase energy production from renewable sources to 20% and to reduce overall energy use by 20%.  Its ultimate goal is to reduce emissions by at least 80% by 2050.  Its emission rate is already decreasing; in the period from 1990 to 2009, the gross domestic product of the EU grew by 40%, while overall emissions were reduced by 16%.

Financing for Adaptation and Mitigation

The Durban Platform included an agreement to begin assembling the “Green Climate Fund” for these purposes from developed countries and disbursing the funds to developing countries.  The Cancun Agreements committed to achieving a level of $30 billion by 2012, and a long-term goal of providing $100 billion/yr by 2020, to help poorer countries adapt to changes in climate and to promote development of renewable sources of energy. 

Reforestation and Record-Keeping

The Durban Platform also included portions implementing other objectives presented in the Cancun Agreements, namely, protection and expansion of the world’s forests, and the documentation with verification of each nation’s greenhouse gas emissions.

Efforts Accomplished Leading up to the Durban Conference

Under China’s 12th Five Year Plan (see this post), the country proposes many programs to reduce its energy intensity (energy use per unit of gross domestic product created).  It is planning a significant expansion of solar generation, albeit beginning from a quite low capacity in place currently.  Nevertheless the absolute amount of greenhouse gas emissions envisioned under the Five Year Plan continue to increase because of the installation of new fossil-fuel driven power generating plants under the Plan.

Australia recently passed a law implementing a cap-and-trade carbon tax on its fossil-fuel driven power and industrial enterprises.  It sets further goals for long-term reduction of emissions, 60-80% by 2050, and promotes development of renewable energy sources.

Conclusion

The Durban Platform embodies, on the one hand, the recognition by developing countries that the past history of emissions by now-industrialized countries cannot be reversed, and on the other hand, the recognition by developed countries that all nations of the world must be brought under a legally binding world-wide climate agreement.  Because of the persistence of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere (see below), and the fact that emissions from one location or region pervade the entire earth, all nations of the world have to accept responsibility for limiting emissions in order to constrain warming of the planet.

The Durban Platform, of course, is only an agreement to negotiate a binding agreement.  The hard part begins now, if the timeline established at Durban is to be met.  Difficult bargaining lies ahead to establish targets for reducing emissions, especially from the countries with the highest emission rates, and the highest rates of growth of their economies and hence their demands for energy.

The delay until 2020 as the year in which the next regime for limiting emissions begins represents a serious setback to efforts to constrain atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases within environmentally acceptable limits.  The Cancun Agreements of 2010 explicitly acknowledged the finding of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) that “climate change represents an urgent and potentially irreversible threat to human societies and the planet, and thus requires [it] to be urgently addressed by all Parties”; they must strive to constrain the average global rise in temperature to 2ºC (3.6ºF) or less.  The concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere required to achieve this limit is 450 parts per million (ppm) of carbon dioxide (CO2) equivalents.  Currently, with the concentration of CO2 at about 392 ppm, the world-wide average temperature has risen about 0.7ºC (1.3ºF) above the temperature that prevailed before the industrial revolution began.  These numbers are significant because CO2 persists in the atmosphere for 100 or more years (barring some reabsorption from reforestation), since there is no natural mechanism for shortening its lifetime.

The CO2 concentration in the atmosphere can be envisioned as a bathtub containing CO2, with the faucet adding more CO2 each year, but with a drain that is essentially blocked, preventing CO2 from draining out.  Each year’s CO2 emissions raise the level of CO2 in the bathtub.  It’s the overall level of CO2 in the atmospheric bathtub that determines the extent of the warming of the global average temperature, not whether any year’s emissions are greater or less than the previous year. 

This is why the nine year delay in implementing significant limitations on emitting greenhouse gases is so critical.  Each year’s delay adds more CO2 and other greenhouse gases to the atmosphere, which persist and make limiting the temperature rise within a desirable bound all the more difficult.  Furthermore, each year’s delay means that the countries of the world will continue installing new facilities that burn fossil fuels, and that will continue in their need for fossil fuels for their effective economic lifetime, 30-40 years or more.  Thus today’s actions along “business-as-usual” lines have detrimental consequences that persist for decades.

Under the Durban Platform, growth in emissions can continue unabated without sanctions (save for voluntary efforts to limit them) for the next nine years.  As a result, long-term world-wide average temperature resulting from higher greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere will increase more than anticipated earlier.  Consequently many regions of the world will suffer more, and more severe, damages and harms due to extreme weather events brought on by the higher average global temperature.  Climate scientists fear that the delay in implementation of any new agreement will lead us to higher global average temperatures than the 2ºC goal established by the IPCC.  Keith Allott, the head of climate change policy at WWF-UK, stated “we must be under no illusion — the outcome of Durban leaves us with the prospect of being legally bound to a world of 4C warming. This would be catastrophic for people and the natural world….”

 
References



Natural Resources Defense Council, blog:  http://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/jschmidt/what_must_global_warming_negot_2.html (accessed Dec. 12, 2011).

Natural Resources Defense Council, blog: http://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/jschmidt/important_progress_at_global_w.html (accessed Dec. 11, 2011).

Natural Resources Defense Council, blog: http://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/jschmidt/congrats_australia_law_passed.html (accessed Dec. 12, 2011).


© 2011 Henry Auer

Monday, December 5, 2011

New Evidence for Warming of the Globe While Policymakers Contend with Each Other in Durban

Labels: Durban conference, Kyoto Protocol, UNFCCC, IPCC, CO2, greenhouse gases, global warming, climate change, emissions, climate models, climate projections

Summary:  The UNFCCC negotiations in Durban are now halfway through the two week schedule for the meeting.  China has proposed terms for agreement, to take effect after 2020, that the developed nations, including the U. S. and the European Union, find unacceptable.

In the face of this contentious situation, there is new evidence for a worsening of the world’s climate.  More CO2 was emitted during 2010 than ever, since start of the Industrial Revolution.  Based on climate models, a new scientific paper projects that large areas of the Northern Hemisphere will warm by 2ºC (3.6ºF) by 2040, within the lifetimes of many living today.  To the extent this occurs, the consequences would be severe.

Introduction.  This year’s international meeting for negotiating a successor agreement to the Kyoto Protocol is convened in Durban, South Africa from Nov. 28 to Dec. 9, 2011.  The Kyoto Protocol and all follow-up meetings are under the auspices of the U. N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) .  The Kyoto Protocol (see this post) was finalized in 1997, and is scheduled to expire at the end of 2012.  It covers only “developed” countries, including the U. S., but the U. S. Senate rejected the treaty so that the U. S. in fact is not bound by its terms.  Upon ratification by a sufficient number of subscribers, the Kyoto Protocol went into effect in 2005.  Under its terms, most participating states undertook to reduce man-made greenhouse gas emissions below their emission levels of 1990 by 8%, during the commitment period, 2008-2012.

The Kyoto Protocol excluded developing countries of the world from its terms. At that time developing countries had very low levels of economic activity, and emitted very small amounts of greenhouse gases (principally carbon dioxide).  Since then, however, the principal developing countries, such as China and India, have expanded dramatically, and have become major contributors to man-made greenhouse gas emissions.  China overtook the U. S. in total amount of emissions around 2009, and now emits the most of any country on earth.

The Durban Conference.  Over the years that annual meetings have been held under the UNFCCC, the objective had been to negotiate a successor to the Kyoto Protocol, to take effect as soon as Kyoto itself terminated.  It is now clear that this will not be accomplished (see this recent post).  Reuters reports on 5 December 2011 (accessed December 5, 2011) that, after the first week of negotiations at the Durban conference, the highest emitters of greenhouse gases, China, India and the U. S., cannot agree on the critical features of a new arrangement. 

In the past, China’s position was that the terms of any new accord be based on carbon intensity, i.e., the amount of greenhouse gas emitted per unit of economic activity (e.g., gross domestic product), rather than the absolute amount of emissions.  As measured in this way, China’s greenhouse gas intensity was trending lower year-by-year, while still pouring more and more absolute amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.  The Chinese, and other developing countries, feel they should not be bound by limits to be placed on absolute amounts of greenhouse gas emissions, as this would restrict them from achieving a higher standard of living.  Furthermore, developing countries object to being placed under future restrictions because of the past history of greenhouse gas emissions from the industrialized countries of the West.

Reuters reports that in recent days at Durban, China has expressed willingness to engage in a legally-binding arrangement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, to take effect in 2020.  But, the agency reports, the Chinese failed to confirm this in a subsequent news conference, and has imposed other conditions.  First, it would require that other major emitters of greenhouse gases likewise be bound by any accord.  Second, it insists that funding for a Green Climate Fund, agreed to at last year’s meeting in Cancun, Mexico, be in place, at the agreed level of $100 billion per year by 2020, to help impoverished and other developing countries adapt to the changes being wrought by warming of the planet. 

According to Reuters, the U. S. special envoy for climate change, Todd Stern, characterized China’s conditions as not acceptable.  He said “all the major players are going to have to be in with obligations and commitments that have the same legal force.  That means no conditionality, no condition of receiving the financing….”  The Climate Commissioner of the European Union (EU), Connie Hedegaard, likewise was skeptical, saying “The question is if China will be legally-bound. That would be interesting…."  The EU is already embarked on an emissions reduction roadmap, with the goal of reducing man-made greenhouse gas emission by at least 80% by 2050 (see this earlier post).

At this time, funding of the Green Climate Fund could also be problematic in view of the poor state of the global economy.  In setting this funding as a condition for going forward, it is felt that China may be setting up a situation that may make ultimately reaching an agreement more difficult.

India is the second largest emitter of greenhouse gases among developing countries, as it, too, proceeds rapidly on a path of economic growth.  Its Environment Minister, Jayanthi Natarajan, insisted on December 5, 2011 on “equity” among nations in order to reach a climate agreement, according to IBNLive (accessed December 5, 2011).  This consideration mirrors that of China.  Sunita Narain, India's leading environmentalist, stressed that the developed countries of the world should bear the burden of reducing, rather than continuing to increase, their carbon emissions.

Worsening State of the Warming of the Planet

In the face of the contentious atmosphere facing negotiators at Durban, recent findings show that the climate continues to develop worsening patterns of greenhouse gas effects.  The New York Times reports on December 4, 2011 (accessed December 5, 2011) that the rate of accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere rose 5.9% during 2010, citing the Global Carbon Project, an international group of climate scientists.  According to them, the incremental burden of greenhouse gases added in 2010 was the largest since the start of the industrial revolution in the middle of the nineteenth century.  Burning of fossil fuels for energy and for manufacture of cement are the principal man-made sources of greenhouse gases, and a majority now is emitted by developing countries such as China and India.  The growing rate of greenhouses gas emissions is worrisome to scientists, since these trends suggest it will be ever harder to limit the warming of the planet to levels that do not cause severe harm to the earth’s environment.

Manoj Joshi and coworkers carried out regional projections on the surface of the earth of when the regional temperature might be expected to reach 2ºC (3.6ºF) higher than the level that prevailed before the start of the industrial revolution (Nature Climate Change 1, 407–412 (2011); published online October 23, 2011).  Although many climate projections predict that the world-wide average temperature could increase by 2ºC by about 2060, this work finds that many regions across the Northern Hemisphere could reach that threshold by as early as 2040, well within the lifetimes of many living right now (see the graphic below).

As colors change from bright red to blue, the year predicted for the regional temperature to increase by 2ºC grows further distant from the present, from 2010 to 2100.
Source:  © 2011 Nature Publishing Group  http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/v1/n8/full/nclimate1261.html


It is seen above that many regions of the Northern Hemisphere are foreseen to warm by 2ºC by 2030 (Siberia, Saharan Africa), and others by 2040 (Europe, southern Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, Canada and Alaska).

Conclusion

Scientific evidence is growing that human actions lead to abnormally high accumulations of greenhouse gases in the earth’s atmosphere.  The consequences of the resulting warming of the earth’s temperature are likely to be severe and dire.  Greenhouse gases emitted into the atmosphere pervade the entire planet; although emitted locally, they persist in the atmosphere and affect the globe worldwide.  In the face of this growing danger, the policy makers of the world’s nations have to overcome national interests and coalesce about a solution that embraces all nations and benefits us all.


© 2011 Henry Auer