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Greenhouse effect Indicators

COST 356 Towards the definition of a measurable environmentally sustainable transport. Greenhouse effect Indicators. Final Conference. Ménouèr Boughedaoui. University of Blida, Faculty of Engineering, Blida, Algeria. Paris, March 15, 2010. 1) Solar radiation. 2) Reflected back to space.

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Greenhouse effect Indicators

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  1. COST 356 Towards the definition of a measurable environmentally sustainable transport Greenhouse effect Indicators Final Conference Ménouèr Boughedaoui University of Blida, Faculty of Engineering, Blida, Algeria Paris, March 15, 2010

  2. 1) Solar radiation 2) Reflected back to space 3) Absorbed by atmosphere 4) IR radiations emitted from Earth 2 5) IR escaped through atmosphere 1 3 6) Absorbed & re-emitted by GHG molecules 4 6 5 The greenhouse gas effect

  3. The greenhouse gas effect • Changes in GHGs concentrations affect the absorption, scattering and emission of radiation within the atmosphere and at the Earth’s surface. • Atmospheric concentrations of GHGs increase when emissions are larger than removal processes.

  4. Emissions Region A Emissions Region B Emissions Region C Emissions Region D Concentrations Radiative forcing Global average temperature change Impact in Region A Impact in Region B Impact in Region C Impact in Region D Cause-effect chain Driver Driver Pressure State Impact Impact Impact

  5. Greenhouse effect indicators - Radiative Forcing: RF, RFI - Global Warming Potential: GWP - Global Temperature Change Potential: GTP - Carbon Equivalent Warming Number: CEWN - Impact on health

  6. Radiative forcing definition • Radiative forcing is a measure of the influence a factor has in altering the balance of incoming and outgoing energy in the Earth-atmosphere system. • Radiative forcing values are for changes relative to preindustrial conditions defined at 1750 and are expressed in watts per square metre (W/m2)

  7. UNFCCC need • The approach adopted in the UNFCCC and made operational in the Kyoto Protocol is a multi-gas abatement strategy. • Formulation of targets requires a metric whereby emissions of different gases with different atmospheric lifetimes and different radiative properties can be compared and weighted.

  8. Global Warming Potential • GWPs provide a metric for comparing the climatic impact of different greenhouse gases.

  9. Radiative forcing • RF which gives the change in radiative budget of the atmopshere system following a perturbation • GWP compares the integration of the RF of a pulse of emission of a GHG for specific time horizon

  10. CO2-equivalents

  11. Greenhouse Gases and Global Warming

  12. Criticisms of GWPs • The impacts of two equal GWP-weighted emissions are equal only in terms of integrated radiative forcing over the chosen time horizon and not in terms of actual temperature change along the path or at the end of the time horizon. • The application of integrated radiative forcing may overestimate the effect of short-lived species if the goal of climate policies is to limit long-term temperature increase.

  13. Radiative Forcing Index • Radiative Forcing Index (RFI) is defined as the ratio of total radiative forcing to that from CO2 emissions alone. • Total radiative forcing induced by aircraft is the sum of all forcings, including direct changes in concentration (CO2, soot) and indirect atmospheric responses (CH4, O3, sulphate).

  14. Radiative Forcing Index • The RFI is designed to compare different sectors with respect to their impact on climate including their effects through non-CO2-gases. • The RFI allows a direct comparison of different sectors of fossil fuel use with respect to their total radiative impacts on the climate system (a comparison between road transport and aviation).

  15. Global temperature potential

  16. Comparison of transport modes(Berntsen and Fuglestvedt, 2008)

  17. Carbon Equivalent Warming Number

  18. GTP & CEWN • The GTP corresponds to a value after a given period of time has elapsed • The CEWN corresponds to an integrated value until a given removal rate has been reached

  19. Greenhouse effect impact on health Indicator Dg: damage due to the unit emission of the pollutant g (number of human life years when the health is affected) Using the Fund model for three gases: CH4, CO2, N2O

  20. Conclusions 1/2 • Metrics based on goals to be met (UNFCCC & KP) • GWP is an important tool for the implementation of the UNFCCC and the KP for a basket of the GHG (six gases) • GWP is mainly from a natural science perspective (social and economical) • Temperature change in a cost effective regime

  21. Conclusions 2/2 • GWP and Dp are quite well adapted to measure the impact of a policy action, but only when these actions impact the greenhouse gas emissions • GTPp can be used for a pulse emission change to estimate impact on temperature for short-lived species. • CEWN is less adapted to measure the action of a policy.

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