Simple emission metrics for climate impacts
-
Published:2013-06-06
Issue:1
Volume:4
Page:145-170
-
ISSN:2190-4987
-
Container-title:Earth System Dynamics
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Earth Syst. Dynam.
Author:
Aamaas B.ORCID, Peters G. P.ORCID, Fuglestvedt J. S.
Abstract
Abstract. In the context of climate change, emissions of different species (e.g., carbon dioxide and methane) are not directly comparable since they have different radiative efficiencies and lifetimes. Since comparisons via detailed climate models are computationally expensive and complex, emission metrics were developed to allow a simple and straightforward comparison of the estimated climate impacts of emissions of different species. Emission metrics are not unique and variety of different emission metrics has been proposed, with key choices being the climate impacts and time horizon to use for comparisons. In this paper, we present analytical expressions and describe how to calculate common emission metrics for different species. We include the climate metrics radiative forcing, integrated radiative forcing, temperature change and integrated temperature change in both absolute form and normalised to a reference gas. We consider pulse emissions, sustained emissions and emission scenarios. The species are separated into three types: CO2 which has a complex decay over time, species with a simple exponential decay, and ozone precursors (NOx, CO, VOC) which indirectly effect climate via various chemical interactions. We also discuss deriving Impulse Response Functions, radiative efficiency, regional dependencies, consistency within and between metrics and uncertainties. We perform various applications to highlight key applications of emission metrics, which show that emissions of CO2 are important regardless of what metric and time horizon is used, but that the importance of short lived climate forcers varies greatly depending on the metric choices made. Further, the ranking of countries by emissions changes very little with different metrics despite large differences in metric values, except for the shortest time horizons (GWP20).
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Reference121 articles.
1. Archer, D. and Brovkin, V.: The millennial atmospheric lifetime of anthropogenic CO2, Climatic Change, 90, 283–297, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-008-9413-1, 2008. 2. Archer, D., Eby, M., Brovkin, V., Ridgwell, A., Cao, L., Mikolajewicz, U., Caldeira, K., Matsumoto, K., Munhoven, G., Montenegro, A., and Tokos, K.: Atmospheric lifetime of fossil fuel carbon dioxide, in: Annual review of earth and planetary sciences, Annual review of earth and planetary sciences, Ann. Rev., Palo Alto, 117–134, 2009. 3. Azar, C. and Johansson, D. J. A.: On the relationship between metrics to compare greenhouse gases –the case of IGTP, GWP and SGTP, Earth Syst. Dynam., 3, 139–147, https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-3-139-2012, 2012. 4. Berntsen, T. and Fuglestvedt, J. S.: Global temperature responses to current emissions from the transport sectors, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 105, 19154–19159, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0804844105, 2008. 5. Berntsen, T., Fuglestvedt, J. S., Joshi, M., Shine, K., Stuber, N., Li, L., Hauglustaine, D., and Ponater, M.: Climate response to regional emissions of ozone precursers: Sensitivities and warming potentials, Tellus B, 57, 283–304, 2005.
Cited by
53 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|