1 / 77

Climate Change Law and Policy

Climate Change Law and Policy. Overview of the carbon cycle and climate change. Short and geological carbon cycles. Greenhouse gas emissions, sources and concentrations. Relevant Terms. Greenhouse gases (GHGs) =

sumi
Download Presentation

Climate Change Law and Policy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Climate Change Law and Policy

  2. Overview of the carbon cycle and climate change

  3. Short and geological carbon cycles

  4. Greenhouse gas emissions, sources and concentrations

  5. Relevant Terms • Greenhouse gases (GHGs) = • gases that absorb infrared radiation [without GHGs, the radiation would escape to the atmosphere]

  6. Relevant Terms • Global Warming Potential (GWP) = • tool to equate the relative warming impacts and atmospheric lifetimes of different GHGs, with CO2 = 1

  7. Relevant Terms • Carbon Dioxide Equivalent (CO2eq) = • tool used to compare a gas’s radiative forcing to CO2

  8. GWPs and different gases Why do we care about different GWPs? Should governments regulate GHGs with different GWPs through a single treaty or should they use different treaties?

  9. GWPs and different gases • GWPs regulated through international climate treaties • CO2 (carbon dioxide) – GWP = 1 • CH4 (methane) – GWP = 21 • N2O (nitrous oxide) – GWP = 310 • HFCs (hydrofluorocarbons) – GWP = 1,000 to 12,000 • PFCs (perfluorocarbons) – GWP = 5,700 • SF6 (sulfur hexafluoride) – GWP = 23,900

  10. Evidence of Climate Change

  11. The Mauna Loa Curve

  12. IPCC chart showing increases in GHGs over past 2,000 years

  13. The Relationship Between Increased GHGs and Global Temperatures

  14. Average surface temperature over past 20,000 years

  15. Trend in global average surface temperatures

  16. Global v. Regional Temperatures • Global temps = consistent temperature rise • Every one of the last 12 years = hottest on record • Has been that way since about 1995 • Regional temperatures will vary • Northern latitudes – expected to see even greater warming than average • Poles are seeing greater temperature increases than equator • but “warming” on a global level will be the norm

  17. Causes of Climate Change

  18. Increased Emissions and Declining “Sinks” • 3 major issues at play • Increasing emissions • Depleting “reservoirs” • Reservoirs = places that store GHGs that were already removed • Declining “sinks” • Sinks = features that remove GHGs from atmosphere

  19. Declining “Sinks” • Why declining? • Forest clearing = removing areas that could be taking up carbon dioxide • If converted to non-forested or urban use • Various changes in climate may diminish ability for natural areas to remove carbon dioxide • Oceans absorbing less carbon dioxide

  20. Sources

  21. GHGs emitted – by pollutant (some sector)

  22. CO2 Emissions • Sources: • Fossil fuel combustion • Energy • Industry • Transportation • Cement production • Deforestation

  23. Methane Emissions • Sources • Agriculture • Livestock = 37% of global methane emissions • Landfills and waste decomposition • Coal mines and oil and gas production

  24. Methane: Australia

  25. Methane: Nigeria

  26. Methane: Italy

  27. Methane: Vietnam

  28. Methane: United States

  29. Methane: China

  30. Increased nitrous oxide concentrations • Agriculture • Livestock/manure • Soils (nitrogen fertilizers) • Car exhaust • Industrial processes

  31. Increased F gas concentrations • Human-made chemicals • Designed as replacements for ozone-depleting chemicals • Used in manufacturing/air conditioning/electronics industries • Relatively small amounts emitted, but huge GWPs

  32. Feedback Loops • “positive” loops = increase the process underway • GHG emissions → warmer surface temps → melting permafrost → increased emissions → increased temps • GHG emissions → warmer temps → melting ice → less reflection → increased temps • Negative loops = minimize impacts • GHG emissions + warmer temps → more plant growth → less carbon dioxide in atmosphere

  33. Effects of climate change

  34. Melting Ice

  35. Melting ice • Melting ice in Arctic/Greenland/Antarctica • Massive ice sheets on land ending up in water = sea level rise • Melting ice everywhere • Less freshwater for drinking/agriculture/etc. • Flooding and then droughts • Habitat loss • Polar bears • Coldwater fish

  36. How ice masses on land become ice masses in the sea

  37. Meltwater in Greenland

  38. Larsen B ice sheet collapse in Antarctica

More Related