Video caption: Global warming: Alps glaciers melting faster as heatwaves hit
Global warming: Alps glaciers melting faster as heatwaves hit
Video shows meltwater flowing as data suggests glaciers may lose the most ice in at least six decades.
Nature Reviews Earth & Environment volume 3, pages516–532 (2022)Cite this article
Black carbon (BC) is produced by incomplete combustion of biomass by wildfires and burning of fossil fuels. BC is environmentally persistent over centuries to millennia, sequestering carbon in marine and terrestrial environments. However, its production, storage and dynamics, and therefore its role in the broader carbon cycling during global change, are poorly understood. In this Review, we discuss BC cycling across the land-to-ocean continuum. Wildfires are the main source of BC, producing 128 ± 84 teragrams per year. Negative climate–BC feedbacks could arise as wildfire increases with anthropogenic warming, producing more BC, which in turn will sequester carbon, but the magnitude of these effects are unknown. Most BC is stored in terrestrial systems with some transported to the ocean via rivers and the atmosphere. However, the oceanic BC budget is not balanced, with known BC removal fluxes exceeding BC inputs. We demonstrate these observed inconsistencies using a simple ocean box model, which highlights key areas of future research. Measurements of BC mineralization and export rates along the land-to-ocean continuum and quantification of previously unexplored sources of oceanic BC are needed to close the global BC budget.
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A major source of black carbon is from household
energy use in low income countries. They use extremely
cheap and inefficient tools to cook and light. This is as bad
for them as for our climate. Of all the climate actions, this
is low hanging fruit. Very effective for little effort. A UN Sustainable
Development Goal is to upgrade them.
Kerosene lamps are used by folks without any electricity and they
are very, very smokey. About 700 million people still don't have
grid or solar electricity. A $50 solar lamp will pay for itself
because they can quit buying so many quarts of expensive
kerosene. Solar light is brighter, cleaner, cheaper. In many
areas, folks are switching, but Africa and parts of Asia, need
some help with this. The good news is in the last decade or so,
maybe 40% of these folks got some electricity.
Half of humanity cooks with firewood and half of them use
hand-made and inefficient stoves. A $25 to $100 factory made
stove is so much more efficient, it will cut their firewood use in
half or more. Upgrading them is very good for the people too.
Less time or expense in getting fuel. Less smoke to breathe
during cooking.
A more efficient little stove means lots less black carbon
emissions. Project
Drawdown found that improved stoves will help about as much
as rooftop
solar.
My favorite nonprofit doing last-mile distribution of these
gadgets is Solar Sister. Regeneration.org
lists some of the groups working on this. The UN's Clean
Cooking Alliance networks and supports them.
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