#GlobalCarbonProject

2024-11-14

Die #Tagesschau berichtet auch:

tagesschau.de/wissen/klima/co2

Laut dem Bericht des #GlobalCarbonProject wird der Höhepunkt der Emissionen noch immer nicht erreicht – ein ernüchterndes Signal für die #Klimaziele.

Um das Pariser 1,5-Grad-Ziel zu halten, müsste der #CO2Ausstoß jährlich um 1,6 Gigatonnen sinken. Während technologische Methoden zur CO₂-Entnahme bisher nur marginal beitragen, bleibt der Schutz und Ausbau natürlicher #CO2Senken entscheidend.

#Klimawandel #CO2Emissionen #Klimaschutz

Good article on the preprint (still) by parts of the team #GlobalCarbonProject how the land carbon sink 2023 net absorbed no CO2 theguardian.com/environment/20
It links to several other papers as well, regarding shrinking ocean's ability to help us.

And it emphasizes the necessary point:
the custom allowed by the Paris agreement, to balance emissions with "national" sinks, is not grounded in the scientific understanding of how things work. It was always the model result that sinks eventually stop helping us. And now that land and ocean show signs of succumbing to our abuse earlier than modelled, the custom is exposed earlier as the illusion it always was.

****
So the creative accounting allowed in the Paris agreement must have been squeezed in there by mainstream economists, I bet.

Maybe, Finland, who wanted to achieve net zero by 2035 simply by expanding their "national" sink instead of doing the hard work in getting emissions to zero,
can pay her way out of the quagmire: take a country from Global South 3 times its own population and make it CO2zero by 2035 by paying for factories and education to manufacture and install wind power and PV with batteries. This way, one country becomesCO2zero by 2035 and increases its resillience against climate disasters by lifting more people out of poverty. Becoming indepemdent from fossil imports and getting clean cooking fuel to everyone also helps the country's government budget. And the factories can be used to ship turbines and PV to the broader region.

@awi
Super! Hat viel Spaß gemacht! So ne Talkshow und mit solchen Gästen könnt ich jeden Tag gucken.
An Antje Boetius noch ne Bitte: gibts die deutsche Version ihrer Folie vom #GlobalCarbonProject auch mit Daten bis 2023? Das Land Carbon Sink war doch 2023 nur 1.4Gt klein, wie das GCP Team vor 3 Wochen in einen Preprint gestellt hat. Das würd ich gern mit Hilfe der dt Folie weiter verbreiten.

Oh shit.

The team of the Global Carbon Project did a rapid analysis for all-time record year-on-year CO2 growth in 2023: #GlobalCarbonProject
arxiv.org/abs/2407.12447 (preprint)

From the thread on Twix by one of the authors:

" 🚨 Collapse of the land carbon sink in 2023 🚨
As the CO2 growth rate reached a record high at Mauna Loa, we set up a low-latency analysis of the carbon budget and found that plants and soils absorbed almost no CO2 last year "

"The decline of the northern sink was masked by recent good conditions in the Tropics absorbing #CO2, but in the coming years if this decline continues, we may see a rapid acceleration of CO2 and global warming which was unforeseen in future climate models projections."

See the whole thread with many charts and many more posts:
nitter.poast.org/ciais_philipp

How much warming in the middle #Miocene 15million years ago came from methane?
Methane is not constrained at all for the Miocene.
But I did the maths –yet I also warn you: I am maths dyslexic. 😁

tldr: with assumed 10 times more wetlands than today and all of the remaining landmass assumed to be like today's tiny "wild rest",
CH4 emissions were 2124 Mt per year.
Which amounted to 6608 ppb CH4 in the atmosphere which in itself caused +2.1°C .

CO2 in 15Ma is not well constrained either. (see below)
I calculate 560ppm to have contributed 3°C (current science working theory for ECS ±1).

So methane 2.1°C and CO2 3°C on their own, omitting all other climate factors, caused +5.1°C in the Miocene.

The breakdown of the numbers follows. With links.

# CO2:

Hoenisch et al 2023 published meticulously revised CO2 values from global #d13C proxies paleo-co2.org , their considered-best proxies are all oceanic in origin.

The chart #1 of 1milion years 15 million years ago, shows #Hoenisch ' s CO2 proxies as the horizontal lines. I chose to fill the gaps with repeated values between the rare data points. So each line segment really is only 1 data point at its right-most end.

560 ppm CO2 seems an okay guess, no?

#CH4 #methane

@Peters_Glen did a cool chart, more intuitive than the one in #AR6, I think. See pic 2 or his tweet where he plots the various greenhouse gases with their warming contribution 2010-2019: x.com/Peters_Glen/status/14318

The average CH4 concentration in the decade 2010-2019 was 1840ppb (NOAA) and caused +0.51°C as per Glen's chart.

From Glen's chart follows my secret methane formula 😁
1 Mt methane <=> 3.111 ppb <=> 0.001 ºC

If emissions in 15Ma were 2124 Mt CH4 (see #landmass below), it resulted in 2.12°C at a concentration of 6608 ppb.

#Landmass

According to the Global Methane Budget by #GlobalCarbonProject : essd.copernicus.org/articles/1

emissions from the "wild rest" 2008-2017 were 222 Mt CH4 annually . See picture 3.

The wild rest today is 54mio km2, according to #OurWorldInData ourworldindata.org/global-land

Wild rest: 222 Mt CH4 from 54mio km2 = 4.1 t CH4 / km2.

Emissions from wetlands 2008-2017 were 180Mt CH4 (Tg=Mt) .
They cover 4.37% of the total land mass: ourworldindata.org/grapher/cov
4.37% of 141mio km2 total is:
Wetlands 6.2mio km2.

Wetlands: 180 Mt from 6.2 km2 = 30 t CH4 / km2.

In 15Ma Miocene, 10 times more wetlands would have been
62 mio km2.
And
wild rest 79 mio km2.

wetlands 62mio km2 times 30t CH4 = 1800 Mt CH4
wild rest 79 mio km2 times 4.1t CH4 = 324 Mt CH4.

Wetlands plus wild rest:
1800 Mt + 324 Mt = 2124 Mt CH4

secret methane formula:
1 Mt methane <=> 3.111 ppb <=> 0.001 ºC

2124 Mt <=> 6608 ppb <=> 2.12°C

Why do I assume that wetlands were 10x more than today, tho? Why not 15, 20 or 5 times more?

Dunno. Well, humans have unwetted lotsa wetlands since the invention of agriculture in the #Holocene. (Btw, the area of today's dried peatland alone emits 2Gt CO2 per year. See table on dried wetland areas and their emissions GHG:
nature.com/articles/s41467-020 #Günther et al 2020, based on IPCC guidelines for wetlands ipcc.ch/publication/2013-suppl )

Hard to tell what area was covered by wetlands in the previous interglacial 126thsd years ago.

And in the middle Miocene, 15Ma?

My thinking goes like this:
The #Sahara was still forested 15Ma. As was the Gobi Desert probably. The prairies in the US were still forested, even #Greenland and #Antarctica. Northern #Russia had much more land mass back then, too.

Some of the different vegetation compared to pre-Holocene was due to different topography: the Rockies and Alpes were much, much lower, the high mountain ranges in East Asia didn't exist. #Australia was 15° further South. See also #Steinthordottir et al 2021 in "Miocene The Future Of The Past agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.co
And the whole special Miocene issue:
agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.co

All land area had gap-less biomes growing. Mostly forests. What do forests do? Away from the coast, within the continents, forests control the hydrological cycle, how much evaporates and how much it rains. All biomes do, but forests most.
The more forests there are, the more it rains. Uninterrupted plant cover with its propagating rain cycle hinders deserts from forming in the heart of the continents, too.

Also, air holds 7% more water per 1°C warming, raising the potential rain amount.

Now, if it rains a lot, and depending on the topography, land is inundated temporary, seasonally or permanently, methane-producing microbes in the soil get to work presto, eat carbon and fart CH4.
The warmer it is, the more the microbes work.

But why 10x more wetlands?
Why not 7 or 15x?
Dunno. 10 feels right. And 6608ppb is nicely close to a guesstimate of mine that mid Miocene CH4 concentration cd have been 7000 ppb.
Maybe 400ppb came from huge animals, happily roaming among giant trees.
Brazil's Giant Sloth? The "wild rest" in the Miocene was HUGE! And cute.
#FridaysForFuture
#anloCH4

Line chart of climate factors 1 million years 15 million years ago. 
Milankovic cycles are the background of the chart. The foreground are several CO2 proxies from Hoenisch's paleoCO2-archive. Also sea level by Miller et al 2020 and by Rohling et al 2021.And global surface air temperature by Westerhold et al 2020. 

Westerhold's surface air temperature peaks at 20.6 °C about 15.6 million years ago and undulates around 18°C the rest of the time. 
The global average in year 2023 was 14.9 by the way. So 15 million years ago, according to Westerhold, it might once have been 6°C warmer than the completey gobsmacking bananas year 2023.The 2010-2019 contribution to warming by greenhouse gases . Glen's chart shows methane at +0.51°C, CO2 at +0.79°C and SO2 at -0.54°C. 
Various other GHG add or subtract warming. 
Resulting average warming 2010-2019 was 1.06°C.Global Methane Budget 2008-2017 as schematics in two different analysis pathways: top down and bottom-up. 
Both vary in their emission and sink values, implying the uncertainty around current methane emission and budget.
Benjamin Carr, Ph.D. 👨🏻‍💻🧬BenjaminHCCarr@hachyderm.io
2023-12-11

Global #carbon #emissions from #fossilfuels to hit record high
Projected rate of #globalwarming has not improved in past two years, analysis shows
The world is on track to have burned more #coal, #oil and #gas in 2023 than it did in 2022, according to a report by the #GlobalCarbonProject, pumping 1.1% more planet-heating #carbondioxide into the atmosphere at a time when emissions must plummet to stop #extremeweather from growing more violent.
theguardian.com/environment/20 #COP28 #climatechange

Wolfgang LuchtW_Lucht@mstdn.social
2023-12-08

Development of CO2 emissions from different fossil fuel sources for the EU27, the US and China. There is a decline of coal in both the EU and the US but fossil gas and oil remain important and prominent. In China there is a continued during increase of emissions from coal.
#GlobalCarbonProject

A graph of emissions by fossil fuel type in the EU27 since 1960 as described in the toot. Graphic by the Global Carbon Project.A graph of emissions by fossil fuel type in the US since 1960 as described in the toot. Graphic by the Global Carbon Project.A graph of emissions by fossil fuel type in China since 1960 as described in the toot. Graphic by the Global Carbon Project.
Wolfgang LuchtW_Lucht@mstdn.social
2023-12-08

In absolute terms (first image), meaning by territorial responsibility, China is by far the largest emitter of CO2 today after its rapid, fossil-driven industrialization, with emissions still rising, while the emissions of US and EU are slightly falling, but only slowly. In the meantime, India has passed the EU in total emissions.

Per capita, an average US citizen is far ahead of everybody else in terms of causing climate heating, followed by Russia, China and the EU.

#GlobalCarbonProject

A graph of largest emitters by country or bloc, as described in the text. Image buy the Global Carbon Project.A graph of largest emitters by country or bloc, in terms of per capita emissions, as described in the text. Image buy the Global Carbon Project.

"
Der neue Bericht des Global Carbon Project zeigt: Die fossilen CO2-Emissionen werden 2023 ein Rekordhoch erreichen. Bleiben die Emissionen so hoch, wird das verbliebene Kohlenstoffbudget zur Einhaltung der 1,5°C-Grenze voraussichtlich in sieben Jahren aufgebraucht sein. Eine Presseinformation der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München.
"
raumfahrer.net/fossile-co2-emi

5.12.2023

#CO2 #COP28 #DACCS #ElNiño #Erde #GCP #GlobalCarbonProject #Klimakrise #Klimawandel #Kohlendioxid #LaNiña #LMU

Extinction Rebellion MünchenMucRebellion@climatejustice.global
2023-12-05

»Statt zu sinken, wird der Ausstoß an Treibhausgasen von fossilen Energieträgern in diesem Jahr weltweit noch einmal um 1,1 Prozent höher liegen als im vergangenen Jahr.« #GlobalCarbonProject #stopfossilfuels #Klimakatastrophe tagesschau.de/wissen/klima/koh

2023-10-07

@gwagner
Let's remember it 2025 when #GlobalCarbonProject attributes a growth in land #carbonsink to the warm September 2023. And let's remember it in 2026 when the #GCP attributes a shrinking land carbon sink to mass forest die-offs due to lack of water and nutrients in the soil that had to support the longer growing season in 2023.

Altho, in reality of course, Canada's 1.2Gt CO2 emissions from forest fires in 2023 is likely going to eat up all the gain from an unusually warm autumn month 2023. And the shrinking land carbon sink in 2024 will be even more pronounced.

O=C=Otuxom
2023-03-05

No sign of decrease in global emissions

Global in 2022 remain at record levels – with no sign of the decrease that is urgently needed to limit warming to 1.5°C, according to the science team.
If current emissions levels persist, there is now a 50% chance that of 1.5°C will be exceeded in 9 years.

globalcarbonbudget.org/no-sign

Article:
essd.copernicus.org/articles/1

Schematic representation of the overall perturbation of the global carbon cycle caused by anthropogenic activities averaged globally for the decade 2012–2021. See legends for the corresponding arrows and units. The uncertainty in the atmospheric CO2 growth rate is very small (±0.02 GtC yr−1) and is neglected for the figure. The anthropogenic perturbation occurs on top of an active carbon cycle, with fluxes and stocks represented in the background and taken from Canadell et al. (2021) for all numbers, except for the carbon stocks in coasts, which are from a literature review of coastal marine sediments (Price and Warren, 2016).
Jacqueline Perssonjac@mastodon.nl
2022-12-27

Key findings #globalcarbonproject for 2022.The planetary remaining carbon budget is being decreasing by the day and not only for a 1.5 C trajectory.

Jacqueline Perssonjac@mastodon.nl
2022-12-27

key findings #globalcarbonproject for 2022 Global fossil fuel emissions seem to be the highest ever – despite high prices (see graph below) with almost 38 Gt CO2

2022-12-16

Behold my secret #methane formula 😁

1 Mt methane <=> 3.111 ppb <=> 0.001 ºC

Valid for the OH cycle 2010-2019.

Applying it to +15ppb in 2020, I get ~5Mt CH4 growth.

#GlobalCarbonProject attributes 15ppb to #wetlands and #OHsink while industry is said to have had LOWER CH4.

I'd say half of the 5Mt was pandemic-induced flaring & bankrupt companies.

2.5Mt are 7 #Nordstream events (released 356247t).
2020 satellite data saw 5.5Mt from such <large-scale> leaks. But seeping wells and flares?🤷🏼‍♀️

Screenshot of IEA's 2021 methane tracker webpage for 2020 data.

"The 2021 Methane Tracker update includes methane emissions from large-scale leaks detected by satellite for the first time. Globally, around 5.5 Mt of methane emissions were detected by satellites in 2020. This is a drop from the 6.7 Mt of methane emissions that were detected by satellite in 2019. Reductions were seen across a number of regions in 2020, but large levels of emissions were still seen across US shale plays, in Turkmenistan, and from pipelines in the Russian Federation. Conversely, relatively few large leaks were detected across major producers in the Middle East, including Iraq and Kuwait.
While satellites provide a way to identify large leaks, they are not going to provide all the answers. Most notably, existing satellites do not provide measurements over equatorial regions, northern areas or for offshore operations. Nevertheless, the urgent need to reduce emissions means that a lack of perfect information should not impede forward progress on introducing abatement measures. "

Highlighted text is: "existing satellites do not provide measurements over equatorial regions, northern areas or for offshore operations. " 

https://www.iea.org/reports/methane-tracker-2021
2022-12-16

nature.com/articles/s41586-022
I get how less #NOx from transport had reduced #OH 2020 and floods or #heatwaves on #permafrost emitted ++ #CH4.
But we <know>: industry upped incomplete flaring yet lies re figures; and info re unplugged wells from bankrupt US-companies is missing. Both caused lots CH4 in 2020.

#GlobalCarbonProject 's work on #methane naturally involves some guesstimates, I get it. But the fact that they don't mention the 2 factors means lots CH4 unaccounted for.
=>OH sink shrunk less⁉️

2022-12-16

@arthurgessler @TXsharon
I understand how less #NOx from transport had reduced #OH and flooding and #heatwaves on #permafrost emitted more #CH4.
But we <know> that industry figures wrt incomplete flaring is false and info on bankrupt companies with open wells is missing. Both caused lots CH4 in 2020.
➡️OH sink shrunk less⁉️

#GlobalCarbonProject 's work on #methane naturally involves some guesstimates, I get that. But the fact that they don't mention these 2 factors means they simply forgot them.

@RARohde
Oh? Where's the earlier data from?
I've only ever played with #GlobalCarbonProject data that begins in 1959.

And wouldn't you agree it is good scicomm to point out that the factors of global warming like overfeeding on atmospheric CO2 in plants leads to nutrient and water depletion in soils and hence, eventually, likely to shrinking of the terrestrial sink?
And acidification and heatwaves in oceans shrinks that sink, too.

Your post sounds very optimistic and I doubt that is warranted or good scicomm. Sorry if my words sound impolite. I'm a stroppy German with cultural disabilities 😁 💐

#CarbonSink

Heinz Wittenbrinkheinz@graz.social
2022-11-14

‘Deeply depressing’: Medienberichte zu Klima und Energie, 12. und 13.11.2022 (🧵)

1.5 is dead – Emissionsrekord 2022 – Ungenügende Reduktionsziele der Hauptemittenten – Präzisierung der europäischen Ziele – Enttäuschende Statements Bidens – Lobbying der Fossilindustrie auf der COP27 – Mia Mottley – Alab Ayroso – Entwaldungs-Höhepunkt am Amazonas – Erhitzung von Nord- und Ostsee (1/12)

#LossAndDamage #BridgetownInitiative #GlobalCarbonProject #Klimanotstand #COP27

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