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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
September
Climate change will affect
carbon sequestration in oceans, model shows
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
9/7/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Atul
Jain, a professor of atmospheric sciences, and colleagues
have developed an Earth System model that indicates
that the best location to store carbon dioxide in
the deep ocean will change with climate change. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— An Earth System model developed by researchers at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign indicates that the best location to
store carbon dioxide in the deep ocean will change with climate change.
The direct injection of carbon dioxide deep into the ocean has been
suggested as one method to help control rising carbon dioxide levels
in the atmosphere and mitigate the effects of global warming. But, because
the atmosphere interacts with the oceans, the net uptake of carbon dioxide
and the oceans’ sequestration capacity could be affected by climate
change.
“Through a number of physical and chemical interactive mechanisms,
the ocean circulation could change and affect the retention time of
carbon dioxide injected into the deep ocean, thereby indirectly altering
oceanic carbon storage and atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration,”
said Atul Jain, a professor of atmospheric
sciences. “Where the carbon dioxide is injected turns out
to be a very important issue.”
Developed by Jain and graduate student Long Cao, the Integrated Science
Assessment Model is a coupled climate-ocean-terrestrial biosphere-carbon
cycle model that allows extensive exploration of key physical and chemical
interactions among individual components of the Earth system, as well
as among carbon cycle, climate change and ocean circulation.
“A good understanding of climate change, ocean circulation, the
ocean carbon cycle and feedback mechanisms is crucial for a reliable
projection of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration and resultant
climate change,” Jain said. The model is described in the September
issue of the Journal of Geophysical Research – Oceans.
Using the model, Jain and Cao studied the effectiveness of oceanic carbon
sequestration by the direct injection of carbon dioxide at different
locations and depths.
They found that climate change has a big impact on the oceans’
ability to store carbon dioxide. The effect was most pronounced in the
Atlantic Ocean. The researchers presented their findings in the May
issue of the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
“When we ran the model without the climate feedback mechanisms,
the Pacific Ocean held more carbon dioxide for a longer time,”
Cao said. “When we added the feedback mechanisms, however, the
retention time in the Atlantic Ocean proved far superior. Injecting
carbon dioxide into the Atlantic Ocean would be more effective than
injecting it at the same depth in either the Pacific Ocean or the Indian
Ocean.”
Future climate change could affect both the uptake of carbon dioxide
in the ocean basins and the ocean circulation patterns themselves, Jain
said. As sea-surface temperatures increase, the density of the water
decreases and thus slows the ocean thermohaline circulation, so the
ocean’s ability to absorb carbon dioxide also decreases. This
leaves more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, exacerbating the problem.
“At the same time, the reduced ocean circulation will decrease
the ocean mixing, which decreases the ventilation to the atmosphere
of carbon injected into the deep ocean,” Jain said. “Our
model results show that this effect is more dramatic in the Atlantic
Ocean.”
Sequestering carbon in the deep ocean is not a permanent solution for
reducing the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, the researchers
report. “Carbon dioxide dumped in the oceans won’t stay
there forever,” Jain said. “Eventually it will percolate
to the surface and into the atmosphere.”
The U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation funded
the work.
Editor’s note:
To reach Atul Jain call 217- 333-2128; e-mail: jain1@uiuc.edu.
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