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Topics for Today. Climate Change: A Global Problem? Part II The Carbon Cycle. Readings for Today. 3.8 Methane and other greenhouse gases 3.10 Responding to science with policy changes 3.11 The Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change 3.12 Global warming and ozone depletion. Readings for Today.
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Topics for Today • Climate Change: A Global Problem? Part II • The Carbon Cycle
Readings for Today • 3.8 Methane and other greenhouse gases • 3.10 Responding to science with policy changes • 3.11 The Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change • 3.12 Global warming and ozone depletion
Readings for Today • 3.5 The Carbon Cycle
Topics for Wednesday • How do we make gasoline?
Topics for Wednesday • Distillation, fractionation, thermal cracking, and octane number
Readings for Wednesday • 4.8 Petroleum • 4.9 The part on cracking
Topics for Friday • What’s all the other stuff in my gasoline? • Quiz #8
Topics for Friday • Gasoline additives (MTBE, ethanol, and oxygenates)
Readings for Friday • 4.10 Newer fuels and other sources
Topics for Today • Climate Change: A Global Problem? Part II • The Carbon Cycle http://www.esd.ornl.gov/iab/iab2-2.htm
2) The Earth’s temperature is rising… 1) GHGs are generally increasing… Are these related ?
It depends on who you ask… Handout.
According to the 2006 UN report… It was "very likely" -- or more than 90 percent probable -- that human activities led by burning fossil fuels explained most of the warming in the past 50 years. That is a toughening from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's (IPCC) last report in 2001, which judged a link as "likely," or 66 percent probable.
We will come back to this… “What are some simple steps we can take home to combat global warming?” Wed December 13, 2006 Leonardo DiCaprio
Kyoto Protocol • Established goals to reduce and stabilize levels of 6 GHG. • CO2, CH4, N2O, HFCs, PFCs, and SF6 3.11
Kyoto Protocol • “Achieve stable greenhouse gas concentrations a century or two from now.” Science, vol 290, November 3, 2000 Long-term Goal
Kyoto Protocol • By 2012, reduce greenhouse gas emissions of developed nations 5.2% below the 1990 level. Short-term goal
2005 Emitters China and India are considered “developing nations.”
Goal • For the U.S., achieve a 7% reduction below 1990 levels.
Kyoto Protocol • Takes effect when ratified by developed nations that emit 55% of the world’s GHG. Has this happened?
2001 • 100 nations (including the U.S.) signed the treaty.
Need 55%! 2001 • Romania ratified treaty. TOTAL: 1.2 % of the emissions
Need 55%! 2002 Czech Republic 1.2% Japan 8.5% Germany 7.4% UK 4.3% TOTAL: 37.4% of the emissions
Need 55%! 2003 • More signings … Canada 3.3% Poland 3.0% TOTAL: 43.7 % of the emissions
Need 55%! 2003 • President Bush rejects Kyoto as too costly and ignores China and India. The US emits about 25% of the world’s GHGs! For you… alternatives for electricity to burning fossil fuels??
Need 55%! 2003 • President Bush rejects Kyoto as too costly and ignores China and India. The US emits about 25% of the world’s GHGs! Alternatives to burning fossil fuels?? Without Russia ratifying, the treaty has no chance of being implemented
Need 55%! Feb 16, 2005 • Russian Federation signs! +17.4% TOTAL: 61.6 % of the emissions
Kyoto Protocol an international & legally binding agreement to reduce GHG emissions world-wide. February 16, 2005 The US is not taking part in the agreement. 3.11
The EU has gone BEYOND the Kyoto Protocol Has agreed to cut GHGs by 20% from 1990 levels by 2020.
ALSO! 10% of autos will run on biofuels (made from plants).
“What are some simple steps we can take home to combat global warming?” Wed December 13, 2006 Leonardo DiCaprio
2) Drive Smart! Q. For a car in good condition, what is the biggest contributor to poor gas mileage??
Topics for Today • Climate Change: A Global Problem? Part II • The Carbon Cycle
1 billion tons of carbon = 1 gigaton (or GtC) = 1,000,000,000 tons
What is wood made up of? Cellulose!
Cellulose • A chain (polymer) of glucose molecules. Glucose: C6H12O6