News Release
Earth's Ability to Absorb Increased Carbon Emissions May Be Limited
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
August 16, 2005
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
The ability of both land and sea to absorb increased emissions of
carbon dioxide is limited, according to a recent study using a new
computer model of Earth’s climate that takes into account the planet’s
carbon cycle. The new generation climate model indicates land and
ocean will absorb less carbon, much of it from the burning of fossil
fuels, in the future if current trends continue, and that could mean
significant shifts in the climate system.
Scott Doney, a Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) geochemist
and co-author of the report published in the August 9, 2005 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
says the new computer model filled in some important details about the
uptake of carbon from the atmosphere, and will enable other
climatologists to address many related questions.
“Time is of the essence in dealing with greenhouse gas emissions,”
Doney said. “We can start now or we can wait 50 years, but in 50 years
we will be committed to significant rapid climate change, having missed
our best opportunity for remediation.” Doney says the team’s study
demonstrates that the earth's ability to soak it up and store it in its
natural reservoirs, or sinks, is inversely related to the rate at which
carbon is added to the atmosphere.
In short, the sooner we slow down gas emissions, the easier it will be
for the Earth’s natural processes to help solve the problem.
Most scientists agree that adding anthropogenic or human-produced
greenhouse gases, like carbon dioxide, to the atmosphere is
contributing to an increase in global temperatures. The land and oceans
currently absorb about half of the carbon dioxide produced by human
activity, and some scientists believe both will continue to remove
carbonthrive as emissions increase. However, the new study suggests
that land and oceans can absorb carbon at a certain rate, and at some
point they may not be able to keep up.
Changes in climate will lead to other changes, like rising sea levels
and vanishing habitats. The earth is a complicated system, however, and
the details of how global warming feeds into the system as a whole are
not yet well understood.
Doney, a senior scientist in the Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry
Department, says one of the most unique and exciting aspects of the
study is the linkage of the earth’s carbon cycle to model projections
of future climate behavior. Carbon-based gases have long been known to
play a major role in global warming, but until now researchers have
been unable to incorporate carbon’s activity in non-atmospheric parts
of the earth system into science’s understanding of climate change.
Doney and collagues conducted experiments that looked at ecosystems,
which are major carbon repositories, as an influence on climate change.
Previous work had focused mainly on the physical and chemical pieces of
the puzzle because older models could not factor in biological
considerations.
“We’re saying that ecosystems are an additional feedback mechanism that
might be as important as physical feedbacks” said Doney, who has served
on many national and international committees on the global carbon
cycle. “The new model will facilitate research into that
question, and hopefully provide insights into the earth’s workings that
will help humanity solve a problem that greatly affects us all.”
Doney’s work was supported by the WHOI Ocean and Climate Change
Institute and the National Science Foundation. Scientists from the
University of California, Berkeley, and the National Center for
Atmospheric Research participated the study.
Originally published: August 16, 2005

