we accept the following premises

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Tools for global warming policy makers Harvey Lam, Princeton University http://www.princeton.edu/~lam

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Tools for global warming policy makers Harvey Lam, Princeton University http://www.princeton.edu/~lam. We accept the following premises. CO 2 emitted by the burning of fossil fuels is primarily responsible for the observed rise of atmospheric CO 2 content . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: We accept the following premises

Tools for global warming policy makersHarvey Lam, Princeton University

http://www.princeton.edu/~lam

Page 2: We accept the following premises

We accept the following premises

• CO2 emitted by the burning of fossil fuels is primarily responsible for the observed rise of atmospheric CO2 content .

• CO2 is a major greenhouse gas.

• Continued and indefinite increase of CO2 can have significant adverse consequences.

• The “fix” should have the consent of an informed public.

Page 3: We accept the following premises

Critiques of current public discourse

1. Inadequate appreciation of the magnitude of the global warming problem. Confusion between global warming, energy independence, and air pollutions.

2. Inadequate appreciation of the time scale of the problem.

3. Inadequate appreciation of the role of the invisible hand of free market capitalism.

Page 4: We accept the following premises

Notations

 t Time (years)

C Atmospheric carbon content (GtC)

E Annual emissions rate (GtC/yr)

Cstab Stabilized C target ceiling

Estab Allowed E when C=Cstab

CO2 concentration: 1 ppm=2.1 GtC

C(before 19th century)~286 ppm ~600 GtC

Page 5: We accept the following premises

At the start of the 21 century

C(0)~800 GtC

E(0)~8 GtC/yr

dC/dt(0)~4 GtC/yr

Stabilization target

Cstab=1200 GtC (example)

Estab=?

dC/dt=0

Page 6: We accept the following premises

Consequences of global warming

• Global average temperature rise by between 2 and 4 degree Celsius for the “doubling” case.

• More droughts and floods.

• Sea levels rise.

• ….

When? How much more? How credible …?

Page 7: We accept the following premises

Common sense questionsA. How much total reduction of annual

carbon emissions---fossil fuels usage---from our current value do we need?

B. Over how many years can we spread out the total reduction job if we start right now?

C. What penalty do we pay if we procrastinate? How do we monitor the state of the global warming world?

Page 8: We accept the following premises

A sample web link from “An Inconvenient Truth”

Want to do something to help stop global warming? Here are things you can do …

1. Use fluorescent lights

2. Drive less

3. Recycle more

4. Check your tires

5. Use less hot water

6. ….

http://www.climatecrissis.net/pdf/10things.pdf

Page 9: We accept the following premises

Messages from the media• Windmills off Cape Cod? No.

• Nuclear energy? No.

• Perhaps the global GDP might drop 1%.

• Executive orders setting goals. Yes.

• Fine the polluters. Yes.

• Ethanol from corn. Yes.

• We can stop global warming now if we only have the will.

• …

Page 10: We accept the following premises

The punch lines

E stab (t) Cstab 600

L (t) (GtC / yr)

L (t) 200 (t 200) /2 200 (years)

CPM (t) 2[Cstab C(t)]

dC(t) /dt(years)

Page 11: We accept the following premises

Best known stabilization curves(WRE, 1996)

Page 12: We accept the following premises

Meaning of Estab and L

E stab (t) Cstab 600

L (t) (GtC / yr)

L (t) 200 (t 200) /2 200 (years)

Analogy to a college in steady state:

Estab is (allowed) size of freshmen class.

L is student residence time.

Cstab-600 is current enrollment on campus.

Page 13: We accept the following premises

Derivation of CPM(t)

CPM (t) 2[Cstab C(t)]

dC(t) /dt

CPM is short for

Constant Pace Mitigation

Mitigation job is done in CPM(t) years.

Value of CPM(t) does not depend on science at all.

Page 14: We accept the following premises

Where does science come in?

E stab (t) Cstab 600

L (t) (GtC / yr)

L (t) 200 (t 200) /2 200 (years)

The following comes from published science-based studies:

Better science will provide better L(t;…).

RepeatCPM(t) is independent of science.

Page 15: We accept the following premises

Answers to question A

E stab Cstab 600

200

For simplicity, we use L(t)~200 years

It is not a 10% or 20% problem!

Cstab=1200, Estab=3 GtC/yr

Cstab=1000, Estab=2 GtC/yr

Cstab=900, Estab=1.5 GtC/yr

Cstab=800, Estab=1 GtC/yr

Currently, C~800 GtC, and E~8 GtC/yr

Page 16: We accept the following premises

Answers to question B

CPM (t) 2[Cstab C(t)]

dC(t) /dt

Its value depends on the chosen target ceiling Cstab, and the current (observed) values of C(t) and dC(t)/dt.

Right now, C(0)=800 GtC, dC(0)/dt=4 GtC/yr.

So:

Cstab=1200, CPM(0)=200 years,

Cstab=1000, CPM(0)=100 years.

Page 17: We accept the following premises

Historical data of CPM(t)

Page 18: We accept the following premises

The CPM strategy is a benchmark strategy which can serve as a guide line.

The CPM strategy

dE

dt

CPM

E E stab

CPM

The recommended pace of mitigation is denoted by PCPM, defined by:

PCPM E E stab

CPM

PCPM(t) and CPM(t) can be computed anytime.

Page 19: We accept the following premises

State of the global warming world

CPM(t) tells how many years do we have (at most) to stabilized at the chosen Cstab.

PCPM(t) tells how much annual emissions reduction is needed now to stabilized at the chosen Cstab for each of the next CPM(t) years (it is the lower bound of this value).

When we are not doing what we should be doing, CPM(t) would drop by more than one year each year, and PCPM(t) would rise.

Page 20: We accept the following premises

Answers to question C

Consequences of business-as-usual

Page 21: We accept the following premises

The Do-the-best-we-can scenario

Page 22: We accept the following premises

Carbon cycle emulator Carbon that used to be buried underground is being dug up, pumped out, burned and emitted into the atmosphere.

Once in the atmosphere, it somehow migrates into the biosphere and the deep ocean, leaving some to stay on.

Conservation of carbon mass must be respected.

Page 23: We accept the following premises

The Three-tank Model

Atmosphere Biosphere Deep Oceans

Page 24: We accept the following premises

The three-tank model

dC

dtE C B

S

dB

dt

C B

S

B D

L

dD

dt B D

L

This is a linear model, with four constants: S, L, and . E(t) is the forcing function.

Page 25: We accept the following premises

In the fast S limit, it reduces to a two-tank model

dC

dt 1

1E C D

L

dD

dt

C D

L

B C

Historical initial condition:

C=B=D=600 GtC when E=0.

Page 26: We accept the following premises

Comparison of the two-tank Model with HILDA

E(t) extracted from HILDA run vs original E(t)

Page 27: We accept the following premises

Historical data of 1/(1+)taken when E was rising with time

1

1

dC /dt

E

Page 28: We accept the following premises

Fantasies1. A California bio-engineering team has

cultivated a strain of termites that eats carbon based garbage, reproduces madly when exposed to sun light and water vapor, and dies happily as greasy oily balls which have the same chemical structure as crude oil from the Middle East. It can produce good quality crude oil at $20 per barrel.

2. OPEC announces a price cut and vows to defend its market share.

Page 29: We accept the following premises

Conclusions1. Global warming is not a 10% or 20%

problem. It is a more than 60% problem.

2. No single technology is likely to be able to do the job. It needs the sum of all the 5% and 10% contributions it can get. Conservation helps. Fission nuclear should not be preemptively be discarded.

3. CPM(t) for several interesting Cstab’s should be publicized annually to keep the public informed.

4. Technology alone cannot solve the problem. The invisible hand of free market capitalism must be removed.

Page 30: We accept the following premises

Parting remarks Political leaders (Gore, Blair, Schwarzenegger, Corzine, …) must recognize that having the will to do the job is not enough.

The general public (you, me, and our grandchildren, …) must be willing to pay the costs and bear the burdens of doing the job.

The global warming problem is much bigger than the ‘energy independence’ and the ‘air pollutions’ problems for which conservation must play a dominant role.

Page 31: We accept the following premises

Socolow, R. H. and Lam, S. H.Good enough tools for global warming policy making,

in Energy for the Future, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 2007.

Available at http://www.princeton.edu/~lam

Page 32: We accept the following premises

Historical data of d(CPM)/dt

Page 33: We accept the following premises

Plot of dC/dt vs E using solutions from the One-tank Model

Page 34: We accept the following premises

Plot of dC/dt vs E for “parabolic immediately” cases for several positive s

EpmActual0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

0

1

2

3

4

5

0

1

2

3

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5

6

Run 3: 500 steps in 0 seconds