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Climate effect of methane is 33 times greater than effect of CO2 Component1 #35716
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+Citaten (2) - CitatenVoeg citaat toeList by: CiterankMapLink[1] Improved Attribution of Climate Forcing to Emissions
Citerend uit: Drew T. Shindell, Greg Faluvegi, Dorothy M. Koch, Gavin A. Schmidt, Nadine Unger, Susanne E. Bauer Publication info: 2009, Science 30 October 2009, Vol. 326 no. 5953 pp. 716-718, DOI: 10.1126/science.1174760 Geciteerd door: David Price 9:20 PM 1 November 2009 GMT Citerank: (1) 35719Calcluate Methane's impact over 20 years959C6EF URL:
| Fragment- Evaluating multicomponent climate change mitigation strategies requires knowledge of the diverse direct and indirect effects of emissions. Methane, ozone, and aerosols are linked through atmospheric chemistry so that emissions of a single pollutant can affect several species. We calculated atmospheric composition changes, historical radiative forcing, and forcing per unit of emission due to aerosol and tropospheric ozone precursor emissions in a coupled composition-climate model. We found that gas-aerosol interactions substantially alter the relative importance of the various emissions. In particular, methane emissions have a larger impact than that used in current carbon-trading schemes or in the Kyoto Protocol. Thus, assessments of multigas mitigation policies, as well as any separate efforts to mitigate warming from short-lived pollutants, should include gas-aerosol interactions. |
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