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A short history of carbon emissions and sinks

Posted on 13 June 2013 by Lindsay W

By Lindsay Wilson, Shrink That Footprint

The world reached a grim milestone recently, with atmospheric concentrations at the historic Mauna Loa observatory hitting the 400 parts per million mark due to our ever increasing carbon emissions.

While this event rightly got the media coverage it deserved, rarely do we stop to appreciate the incredible job land and ocean sinks have played in ensuring this figure isn’t significantly higher.

Using data for all sources and sinks of human carbon emissions over the last 262 years this post highlights just how hard the oceans, plants and soils are working to slow the growth of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations.

Global carbon emissions and sinks

Since 1750 the human race has been responsible for roughly 2,000 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide emissions.

These human carbon emissions have added to the much larger natural carbon cycle and resulted in the growing atmospheric concentrations so well documented by the Keeling Curve.

Using data from the IPCCGCP, and CDIAC we can quantify where human carbon emissions have come from and where those emissions have gone over the last 262 years:

Carbon emissions and sinks since 1750

Click the image to enlarge.

Human induced carbon emissions since the industrial revolution have totaled almost 2,000 Gt CO2.  The major sources of emissions have been coal* (34%), oil (25%), gas (10%), cement (2%) and land-use (29%).

A few important caveats for these figures are worth discussing.  Coal emissions also include a significant volume of biomass emissions, while dwarfed by coal in recent years biomass emissions were likely dominant until at least 1900 .  For natural gas a small share results from flaring, and oil emissions included a very small share from bio-fuel emissions.  Land use emissions represent the net change in carbon stocks resulting from human activities.  This includes both increased emissions and reduced sink capacity.

The figures for the land, ocean and atmospheric sinks describe where these 2,000 Gt COhave gone.  The three major sinks for human carbon emissions are the atmosphere (44%), the ocean (30%) and the land (26%).

These figures don’t necessarily account for the same molecules of carbon dioxide, but rather how the imbalance created by adding extra human emissions to the natural carbon cycle have affected sink carbon stores.

The carbon dioxide that has been added to the oceans, plants, soils and fungi is the result of both greater emission rates and higher atmospheric concentrations.  This results in a kind of negative feedback where ocean and land sinks absorb more carbon dioxide as more is pumped into the air.

Together ocean and plants sinks have absorbed 56% of human carbon emissions since 1750.  Without these sinks working overtime atmospheric carbon concentrations would already be well over 500 parts per million (ppm).  In the case of the ocean acidification in particular this has not come without a cost.

The importance of carbon sinks

We can take our analysis further by thinking about these carbon emissions and sinks in terms of atmospheric concentrations.

For each 7.8 Gt of carbon dioxide that is added to the atmosphere global concentrations increase by 1 part per million.  The 879 Gt of human carbon emissions that have stayed in the atmosphere since 1750 are thus equal to an increase in atmospheric concentrations of 113 ppm.

This extra carbon dioxide has driven global atmospheric concentrations from 280 ppm in 1750 to 393 ppm by 2012.  Note this is the annual global average as opposed to the more widely reported Mauna Loa figures.

We can use a similar calculation to understand how all human sources of carbon emissions and carbon sinks relate to the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide.

I find the result a powerfully simple way of visualizing how human carbon emissions and carbon sinks affect the atmospheric concentration of CO:

The importance of carbon sinks

Click the image to enlarge

The data in this waterfall chart is exactly the same as the previous emissions and sinks analysis, but has been converted to illustrate how emissions and sinks affect atmospheric concentrations.

If all human carbon emissions had remained in the atmosphere over the last 260 years atmospheric carbon concentrations would be 537 ppm, or 257 ppm above where they where in 1750.  If we exclude land-use emissions this figure is 460 ppm.

In terms of a parts per million increase the sources of human carbon emissions are equivalent to the following: coal (+86 ppm), oil (+64 ppm), gas (+26 ppm), cement (+5 ppm) and land-use (+ 76 ppm).

Without land and ocean sinks working overtime concentrations of carbon dioxide would be well beyond the 400 ppm recently observed in Hawaii.  The ocean sink (-76 ppm) and land sink (-68 ppm) have absorbed 56% of human carbon emissions since 1750, keeping global carbon dioxide concentrations ‘down’ to 393 ppm in 2012.

These natural sinks for carbon dioxide have been crucially important in slowing the growth of atmospheric carbon dioxide in the past.

The future of carbon sinks

To keep things as clear as possible this analysis has only looked at cumulative emissions.  The limitation of this approach is that it doesn’t tell us much about the annual rates of carbon emission and sink absorption.

The high level story is pretty simple.  Human kind is emitting more and more carbon dioxide, as falling land-use emissions are dwarfed by emissions from our growing use of fossil fuels.  In reaction to increased emission rates and growing atmospheric concentrations both land and ocean sinks are absorbing more carbon dioxide.  The Global Carbon Budget has an excellent summary of this.

Despite the fact that sinks are absorbing more CO2 the atmospheric concentration is growing at a faster rate than ever.  In the decade from 2000-2009 the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide grew at an average rate of 2.0 ppm/yr, higher than any previous decade measured.  To reduce this growth rate global carbon emissions need to decline.  To stop concentrations growing at all would require an immediate reduction in carbon emissions by 55-60%, followed by further reductions in time.

In any future emissions scenario the reaction of our carbon sinks will play a key role in controlling atmospheric carbon concentrations.  Hopefully sink absorption will continue to moderate the growth rate of atmospheric carbon, but this is not certain.  Plenty of research warns of the dangerous possibilities of sinks becoming sources of emissions.  These are the risks of positive feedbacks from things like drought, fire, peat-land dehydration, permafrost melt and out-gassing oceans.

Whenever we talk about tackling the carbon problem it is worth remembering the incredible job the land and ocean sinks do in slowing the growth of atmospheric carbon.  This is a good reminder that reducing land use emissions and protecting carbon sinks are also part of the solution. 

This article was originally published at Shrink That Footprint. Read the original article.

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Comments

Comments 1 to 5:

  1. Thanks for the article. I appreciate the overview you get with a 'short history ' style. I hadn't realised that land use was so large a component of the emissions.

    Regarding the 2,000 gigatonnes already emitted, Bill McKibben states that we need to limit emissions from now on to 565 Gt to keep below 2 Deg C. At current emission growth rates it will take 14 years to reach this figure and it's just one fifth of the reserves on the books of the fossil fuel companies. It's a fairly simple and stark equation.

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  2. If you consider land use and biomass emissions together they dominated fossil fuels until as late as the first world war.  But by 2010 fossil fuel emissions were about 8 times greater

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  3. Regardign carbon sinks, what can you say about the recent JAXA satellite data.

    http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2012/12/20121205_ibuki_e.html

    It appears that the Northern boreal forests are much greater sinks than the tropical rain forests.

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  4. Daniel, I must say I'm not great expert on sinks.  That said there have been some studies suggesting that in the boreal forests fungi is playing a major role in sequestration.

    http://phys.org/news/2013-03-fungi-responsible-carbon-sequestration-northern.html

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  5. Daniel @3, two points:

    1)  The NH seasonal CO2 flux is dominated by the growth and fall of leaves on deciduos trees.  This is shown in measurements of CO2 concentration from Barrow (Alaska):

    Looking closely, you can see that January corresponds to the nearly flat plateau at the peak of CO2 conenctration, and hence with a flux minimum.  That is unsurprising in that the leaves have fallen, but are to cold to decompose.  In contrast, July corresponds to the steep downward slope in CO2 concentration.  Again this is unsurprising in that summer is a period of maximum plant growth.

    The net effect of this, and of providing data for just two months is that the Jaxa data gives a very poor indication of annual CO2 flux from northern dedediduous forests, or indeed, northern tundra where similar considerations arise.  It represents a snap shot of one month of maximum flux and one month of near zero flux in a cycle that is close to carbon neutral.

    Similar considerations apply to the tropical forest, but are nowhere near as strong in that the difference between summer and winter growth are much smaller in the tropics.

    2)  Much of the original extent of the northern deciduous forest was deforested in the early twentieth century, or before.  Since then, many areas previously denuded of trees have been allowed to regrow forest, and some forests still used for lumber are more heavilly managed allowing a greater retention of carbon.  In contrast, large scale deforestation in the tropics has been a novel feature of the last few decades.  Further, it is very poorly managed, with extensive logging in areas supposedly set aside as nature reserves.  Consequently part of the difference between NH deciduous forest and tropical forest fluxes is simply a result of changes in land use rather than natural fluxes.

    Given these two factors, the Gosat data is almost useless in isolation for determining the net natural flux for tropical forest and northern deciduous forest.  It may well be useful when coupled with additional detailed knowledge, but I am not an expert and cannot comment on that.

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