5. How Can
We Measure Carbon Dioxide?
Archive of Past Articles for Chapter
5
2009 October 8. Last
time carbon dioxide levels were
this high: 15 million years ago,
scientists report. EurekAlert. Excerpt:
You would have to go back at least
15 million years to find carbon dioxide
levels on Earth as high as they are
today, a UCLA scientist and colleagues
report Oct. 8 in the online edition
of the journal Science.
"The last time carbon dioxide
levels were apparently as high as
they are today — and were sustained
at those levels — global temperatures
were 5 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit higher
than they are today, the sea level
was approximately 75 to 120 feet
higher than today, there was no permanent
sea ice cap in the Arctic and very
little ice on Antarctica and Greenland," said
the paper's lead author, Aradhna
Tripati, a UCLA assistant professor
in the department of Earth and space
sciences and the department of atmospheric
and oceanic sciences.
...By analyzing the chemistry of
bubbles of ancient air trapped in
Antarctic ice, scientists have been
able to determine the composition
of Earth's atmosphere going back
as far as 800,000 years, and they
have developed a good understanding
of how carbon dioxide levels have
varied in the atmosphere since that
time. But there has been little agreement
before this study on how to reconstruct
carbon dioxide levels prior to 800,000
years ago.
..."A slightly shocking finding," Tripati
said, "is that the only time
in the last 20 million years that
we find evidence for carbon dioxide
levels similar to the modern level
of 387 parts per million was 15 to
20 million years ago, when the planet
was dramatically different."
Levels of carbon dioxide have varied
only between 180 and 300 parts per
million over the last 800,000 years — until
recent decades, said Tripati, who
is also a member of UCLA's Institute
of Geophysics and Planetary Physics.
It has been known that modern-day
levels of carbon dioxide are unprecedented
over the last 800,000 years, but
the finding that modern levels have
not been reached in the last 15 million
years is new....
2009 February 24. NASA
Satellite Fails to Reach Orbit. By Kenneth
Chang, the NY Times. Excerpt:
A NASA satellite to track carbon
dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere
failed to reach its orbit during
launching Tuesday morning, scuttling
the $278 million mission.
...The Orbiting Carbon Observatory
lifted off on schedule at 1:55
a.m. Pacific time from Vandenberg
Air Force Base in California aboard
a four-stage Taurus XL rocket.
But three minutes later, during
the burning of the third stage,
the payload fairing — a clamshell
nose cone that protects the satellite
as it rises through the atmosphere — failed
to separate as commanded.
The third and fourth stages burned
properly, but because of the added
weight of the nose cone, the satellite
did not reach orbit.
...The satellite fell back to Earth,
landing in the ocean just short
of Antarctica.
...The carbon observatory was to
precisely measure levels of carbon
dioxide — the heat-trapping
gas that is driving global warming — in
the air. Scientists had hoped the
new data, covering the entire planet,
would help them improve climate
models and better understand the “carbon
sinks” like oceans and forests
and that absorb much of the carbon
dioxide....
2009 February 23. NASA-Funded
Carbon Dioxide Map Of U.S. Released
On Google Earth. ScienceDaily.
Excerpt: Interactive maps that detail
carbon dioxide emissions from fossil
fuel combustion are now available
on the popular Google Earth platform.
The maps, funded by NASA and the
U.S. Department of Energy through
the joint North American Carbon Program,
can display fossil fuel emissions
by the hour, geographic region, and
fuel type.
...Researchers from the project,
named "Vulcan" for the
Roman god of fire, constructed an
unprecedented inventory of the carbon
dioxide that results from the burning
of 48 different types of fossil fuel.
The data-based maps show estimates
of the hourly carbon dioxide outputs
of factories, power plants, vehicle
traffic and residential and commercial
areas.
...“The release of the Vulcan
inventory on Google Earth brings
this information into the living
room of anyone with an Internet connection," said
Kevin Gurney, an assistant professor
of Earth and atmospheric sciences
at Purdue and leader of the Vulcan
Project. "From a societal perspective,
Vulcan provides a description of
where and when society influences
climate change through fossil-fuel
carbon dioxide emissions."...
2009 January 29. NASA RELEASE:
09-021. NASA
Mission to Help Unravel Key Carbon,
Climate Mysteries.
Excerpt: WASHINGTON -- NASA's first
spacecraft dedicated to studying
atmospheric carbon dioxide is in
final preparations for a Feb. 23
launch from Vandenberg Air Force
Base in California. Carbon dioxide
is the leading human-produced greenhouse
gas driving changes in Earth's
climate.
The Orbiting Carbon Observatory
will provide the first complete
picture of human and natural carbon
dioxide sources as well as their "sinks," the
places where carbon dioxide is
pulled out of the atmosphere and
stored. It will map the global
geographic distribution of these
sources and sinks and study their
changes over time. The measurements
will be combined with data from
ground stations, aircraft and other
satellites to help answer questions
about the processes that regulate
atmospheric carbon dioxide and
its role in Earth's climate and
carbon cycle.
..."It's critical that we
understand the processes controlling
carbon dioxide in our atmosphere
today so we can predict how fast
it will build up in the future
and how quickly we'll have to adapt
to climate change caused by carbon
dioxide buildup," said David
Crisp, principal investigator for
the Orbiting Carbon Observatory
at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
in Pasadena, Calif.
...The new observatory will dramatically
improve global carbon dioxide measurements,
collecting about 8 million measurements
every 16 days for at least two
years.... Scientists need these
precise measurements because carbon
dioxide varies by just 10 parts
per million throughout the year
on regional to continental scales....
2008 December 4. The
Ins and Outs of the Global Carbon
Cycle. By Jeremy
Jacquot, Science Progress. Excerpt:
...Having spent the last few
decades piecing together the different
components of the global carbon puzzle,
scientists now have a good idea of
how the planet’s
natural carbon sinks (or reservoirs)
work—primarily these sinks
are plants and the oceans. But when
it comes to pinpointing the locations
of all the sources (areas or organisms
which release carbon dioxide to the
atmosphere), there remains a lot
of ambiguity—mostly because
climate change is constantly changing
the picture of how the sources work
(and it’s usually changing
for the worse). ...What many
scientists are now worried about
is the degree to which carbon sinks
could shrink, or carbon sources could
grow, in response to the rapid increase
in anthropogenic CO2 emissions.
The easiest way to think of the global
carbon cycle is as the sum total
of different reactions...between
and within the planet’s major
carbon repositories: the ocean and
terrestrial biosphere. The ocean
is by far the larger one—estimated
to hold about 38,000 petagrams (1
petagram equals one trillion grams);
the land plants and soils that make
up the terrestrial biosphere store
only about 2,000.
...These sinks currently absorb around
half of all the carbon dioxide emitted
through fossil fuel combustion. Around
85 percent of new anthropogenic CO2
ends up in the ocean... Almost half
of the total amount of anthropogenic
CO2 that has been added to the atmosphere
since pre-industrial times has gone
into the ocean.
...scientists are beginning
to come to grips with the realization
that many erstwhile sinks, primarily
plants and soils, could lose their
ability to draw down CO2 in a warming
world—with a worst-case scenario
being that they would turn into sources....
2008 December 1. Carbon
Detectives Are Tracking Gases
in Colorado. By
Susan Moran, The New York Times.
Excerpt:
BOULDER, Colo. — As
she squeezed herself into a telephone-booth-size
elevator to ascend a 984-foot tower
in Colorado’s eastern plains,
Arlyn Andrews said with a grin, “This
makes me want to go rock climbing.”
It’s a good thing she loves
climbing tall structures. Dr. Andrews,
an atmospheric scientist at the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration in Boulder, climbs
the tower periodically to make
sure the narrow tubes running from
the tower to analyzers nearby are
properly taking continuous samples
of carbon dioxide, methane and
a cocktail of other greenhouse
gases.
...“We’re able to detect
the whole mix of emissions here — what
comes from automobile traffic,
from industry, from residential
development and from agriculture,” Dr.
Andrews said.
She is one of many carbon sleuths,
scientists who track and analyze
where greenhouse gases come from
and where they go over time. Think
of it like personal finances. To
plan for a sound financial future,
it helps to create a budget and
keep track of how one is spending
money. Similarly, atmospheric scientists
need to develop a “budget” for
greenhouse gases.
...The key task is measuring the
sources, or emissions, of these
planet-warming gases, and the “sinks” — forests,
cropland and oceans that absorb
carbon. This budget can then inform
intelligent climate-control policy,
whether it be managing one forest
or shaping national emissions regulations.
...But uncertainty remains high — often
as high as estimates themselves.
For instance, researchers think
about half of the CO2 emitted into
the atmosphere gets absorbed by
oceans and land, but they do not
know precisely where the gases
come from and where they end up.
This knowledge gap has serious
policy implications; until it becomes
clear where emissions are going,
it will remain difficult to have
verifiable credits for sequestering
carbon....
2008 November 12.
NASA'S
Carbon-Sniffing Satellite Sleuth
Arrives at Launch Site. NASA
RELEASE : 08-285. Excerpt: WASHINGTON
-- NASA's first spacecraft dedicated
to studying carbon dioxide, the
leading human-produced greenhouse
gas driving changes in Earth's
climate, has arrived at Vandenberg
Air Force Base, Calif., to begin
final launch preparations.
The Orbiting Carbon Observatory arrived
Nov. 11 at its launch site on California's
central coast after completing a
cross-country trip by truck from
its manufacturer, Orbital Sciences
Corp. in Dulles, Va....After final
tests, the spacecraft will be integrated
onto an Orbital Sciences Taurus rocket
in preparation for its planned January
2009 launch.
The observatory will help solve some
of the lingering mysteries in our
understanding of Earth's carbon cycle
and its primary atmospheric component,
carbon dioxide, a chemical compound
that is produced both naturally and
through human activities....
...The observatory's space-based
measurements of atmospheric carbon
dioxide will have the precision,
resolution and coverage needed to
provide the first complete picture
of both human and natural sources
of carbon dioxide emissions. It will
show the places where they are absorbed,
known as "sinks," at regional
scales everywhere on Earth. Its data
will reduce uncertainties in forecasts
of how much carbon dioxide is in
the atmosphere and improve the accuracy
of global climate change predictions....
2008 April 7,Breath
of a Nation - Animated CO2 Map.
By ANDREW C. REVKIN. Scientists
have come up with a new way to
precisely track daily and local
patterns of carbon dioxide emissions
from the burning of fossil fuels
by power plants, factories, and
vehicle traffic. The resulting
database and maps provide a view
of the "industrial metabolism" of
our combustion-powered lives, Kevin
Gurney, the leader in the project
and an atmospheric scientist at
Purdue, told me today.
A YouTube video produced by the
team, which did the work with funding
from NASA and the Department of
Energy, includes fascinating animations
showing the daily burst of emissions
as industry and traffic kick into
gear, and also reveals regional
patterns showing that the Southeast
is a bigger contributor to emissions
than researchers realized. For
more info, see article
at Purdue website.
16 December 2007. Climate
Plan Looks Beyond Bush's Tenure.
By THOMAS
FULLER and ANDREW C. REVKIN, NY
Times. Excerpt:
NUSA DUA, Indonesia -
The world's faltering effort to
cut greenhouse gas emissions got
a
new lease on life on Saturday,
as delegates from 187 countries
agreed
to negotiate a new accord over
the next two years....
Many officials and environmental
campaigners said American
negotiators had remained obstructionist
until the final hour of the
two-week convention and had changed
their stance only after public
rebukes that included boos and
hisses from other delegates.
The resulting "Bali Action
Plan" contains no binding
commitments,
which European countries had sought
and the United States fended off.
The plan concludes that "deep
cuts in global emissions will be
required" and provides a timetable
for two years of talks to shape
the first formal addendum to the
1992 Framework Convention on Climate
Change treaty since the Kyoto Protocol
10 years ago.
... in the final tumultuous plenary,
when the American team was booed
for trying to block a proposal
by India.
Kevin Conrad, the negotiator from
Papua New Guinea, rebuked the
American delegation. "If for
some reason you are not killing
to lead,
leave it to the rest of us," he
said. "Please, get out of
the way."
He was alluding to remarks made
by an American official, James
Connaughton, chairman of the White
House Council on Environmental
Quality, last week to a Reuters
reporter, who quoted him as saying,"The
U.S. will lead, and we will continue
to lead, but leadership also requires
others to fall in line and follow."
That statement had become a sore
point to many delegations.
A few more statements were made,
but none of America's traditional
allies came to its defense.
Finally, Paula Dobriansky, the
lead American negotiator, spoke."We
came here to Bali because we want
to go forward as part of a new
framework," said Ms. Dobriansky,
the under secretary of state for
democracy and global affairs. "We
believe we have a shared vision
and
we want to move that forward. We
want a success here in Bali. We
will
go forward and join consensus."
The delegates erupted in lengthy
applause, realizing that a deal
was
finally at hand.
1 November 2007. Is
the ocean carbon sink sinking? RealClimate
website. --David. Excerpt:
The past few weeks and years
have seen a bushel of papers
finding that the natural world,
in particular perhaps the ocean,
is getting fed up with absorbing
our CO2... evidence that the
hypothesized
carbon cycle positive feedback has begun.
...If changing climate were to
cause the natural world to slow
down its carbon uptake, or even
begin to release carbon, that would
exacerbate the climate forcing
from fossil fuels: a positive feedback.
The ocean has a tendency to take
up more carbon as the CO2 concentration
in the air rises, because of Henry's
Law, which states that in equilibrium,
more in the air means more dissolved
in the water. Stratification of
the waters in the ocean, due to
warming at the surface for example,
tends to oppose CO2 invasion, by
slowing the rate of replenishing
surface waters by deep waters which
haven't taken up fossil fuel CO2
yet.
... Le Quere et al. [2007] ...
find that the Southern Ocean has
begun to release carbon since about
1990....
A decrease in ocean uptake is more
clearly documented in the North
Atlantic by Schuster and Watson
[2007]. They show surface ocean
CO2 measurements ... rose by about
15 microatmospheres
...The warming at the end of the
last ice age was prompted by changes
in Earth's orbit around the sun,
but it was greatly amplified by
the rising CO2 concentration in
the atmosphere. The orbits pushed
on ice sheets, which pushed on
climate. The climate changes triggered
a strong positive carbon cycle
feedback which is, yes, still poorly
understood.
Now industrial activity is pushing
on atmospheric CO2 directly. The
question is when and how strongly
the carbon cycle will push back.
Note From:Avalone-King,
Debbie J
... I'd like to prompt interested
teachers to examine (online) some
of the buoy's collecting data on
CO2 exchange between air and ocean.
(pertinent web links can be found
in attachment) [See also the] BUOY
DATA WORKSHEET - for HS students
that might provide them with an
interesting classroom exercise
on this topic. This is an activity
I recently put together at a Teacher
Insitute on CC and Oceans as an
educational assignment. I think
it's pretty interesting.
Would love to hear feedback on
the exercise and how it works in
the classroom. I believe I shared
a really neat carbon cycle classroom
activity with this group a few
months back, but if you did get
it - feel free to inquire further.
9 October 2007. Scientist:
Greenhouse Gas Levels Grave.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Excerpt:
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -- Strong
worldwide economic growth has
accelerated the level of greenhouse
gas emissions in the atmosphere
to a dangerous threshold scientists
had not expected for another decade,
according to a leading Australian
climate change expert.
Scientist Tim Flannery told Australian
Broadcasting Corp. that an upcoming
report by the U.N. Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change will contain
new data showing that the level
of climate-changing gases in the
atmosphere has already reached
critical levels.
Flannery is not a member of the
IPCC, but said he based his comments
on a thorough review of the technical
data included in the panel's three
working group reports published
earlier this year. The IPCC is
due to release its final report
synthesizing the data in November.
''What the report establishes is
that the amount of greenhouse gas
in the atmosphere is already above
the threshold that can potentially
cause dangerous climate change,''
Flannery told the broadcaster late
Monday. ''We are already at great
risk of dangerous climate change,
that's what these figures say.
It's not next year or next decade,
it's now.'' ...The new data could
add urgency to the next round of
U.N. climate change talks on the
Indonesian island of Bali in December,
which will aim to start negotiations
on a replacement for the 1997 Kyoto
Protocol, which expires in 2012....
8 May 2007. Sale
of Carbon Credits Helping Land-Rich,
but Cash-Poor, Tribes. By
JIM ROBBINS, The New York Times.
Excerpt:
LAPWAI, Idaho - On the Nez Perce
reservation here, land that was
cleared in the 19th century for
farming is being converted back
to forest, in part to sell the
trees' ability to sequester carbon.... "These
forests are a carbon crop," Brian
Kummett, a forester for the Nez
Perce tribal forestry division,
said as he surveyed a vast field
studded with recently planted ponderosa
pine, Douglas fir and larch saplings. "We
can sell the rights from the time
the forest is planted to the time
it's harvested, 80 or 120 years
down the road."...The Nez
Perce are participating in an Indian
tribe "carbon
portfolio" being created by
the National Carbon Offset Coalition
in Butte, Mont., an organization
supported largely by the Energy
Department....An acre of pine forest
captures and holds one to two metric
tons of carbon dioxide per year,
which it uses for photosynthesis.
Untilled cropland holds a third
of a ton of carbon per acre, and
rangeland holds up to a fifth of
a ton. The sequestered carbon dioxide
is measured by soil tests before
and after the planting. The market
for carbon sequestration in the
United States is voluntary. As
a result, the demand has been low
compared with Europe, where emissions
are now restricted by law. ...Tribal
carbon sales have had mixed results
since the first such sale in the
1990s, when the Confederated Tribes
of the Colville Reservation in
Washington sold rights to its land
for 25 cents a metric ton. ...Carbon
dioxide credits now sell for about
$4 a metric ton. Mandatory restrictions,
experts say, could increase the
price to $12 or higher. In Europe,
the cost of a credit sold for sequestering
carbon dioxide has reached $20,
and even $30, a ton....The sale
of carbon sequestration rights
has enhanced land conservation.
Plants on rangeland where carbon
rights have been sold, for example,
have to be kept healthy to assure
that they hold carbon. That means
that they have to be grazed by
a specific number of cows in a
certain way. Forests have to be
managed sustainably....
12 April 2007. Hot Topic, Cool
Science: The Greenhouse Effect
and the Orbiting Carbon Observatory.
Talk by Dr. Charles "Chip" E.
Miller, Deputy Principal Investigator,
Orbiting Carbon Observatory. Carbon
dioxide is the primary greenhouse
gas released into the atmosphere
by fossil fuel combustion and
other human activities. The year
2005 saw atmospheric carbon dioxide
climb to its highest level in
the last 500,000 years - raising
concerns about increased greenhouse
forcing of Earth's climate. NASA's
Orbiting Carbon Observatory [OCO]
mission, scheduled for launch
in 2008 will address these concerns
by collecting precise global
measurements of carbon dioxide
in Earth's atmosphere and revolutionizing
our understanding of the global
carbon cycle. Come learn how
the Orbiting Carbon Observatory
will measure your carbon footprint.
http://oco.jpl.nasa.gov/
22 January 2007. Scientists
Analyze Corn To Map North American
Carbon Dioxide. NASA Earth
Observatory. Scientists have
developed a novel way of mapping
carbon dioxide levels in various
parts of North America, by analyzing
corn grown in those regions.
Diana Hsueh at the University
of California, Irvine, and colleagues
collected corn from nearly 70 locations
in the United States and Canada.
They found that the Ohio Valley
and California had the most fossil-fuel-emitted
carbon dioxide, while the Colorado
region had the least. ...The scientists
had expected carbon dioxide from
California and other western coastal
states to drift eastward, but they
found that the Rocky Mountains
appeared to provide a barrier....
Archive
of Past Articles for Chapter
5
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Chapters
- What
is the Greenhouse Effect?
- What
is Global Warming?
- What
is the Controversy About?
- What's
So Special About CO2?
- How
Can We Measure Carbon Dioxide?
- Is
the Atmosphere Really Changing?
- What
are the Greenhouse Gases?
- What
are the Governments Doing about
Climate Change?
- What
do you think about Global
Climate Change
Climate
- 19 multimedia resources from Teachers' Domain Earth
and Space Science.
Movies
for Investigation "Sampling
Carbon Dioxide" showing:
Climate
Change Education.org
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