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Aviation and the Global Atmosphere

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<strong>Aviation</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Global</strong> <strong>Atmosphere</strong><br />

<strong>Aviation</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Global</strong> <strong>Atmosphere</strong><br />

Table of contents | Previous page | Next page<br />

6.3.4. Radiative Forcing for CH4<br />

O<strong>the</strong>r reports in this collection<br />

Methane is a long-lived, well-mixed greenhouse gas. It has an atmospheric lifetime of about 9 years. The tropospheric chemical models used to evaluate <strong>the</strong> impact of<br />

<strong>the</strong> subsonic fleet found unanimously that CH4 lifetime was reduced by aircraft emissions (see Chapter 4). This instantaneous change (-1.3% in 1992, -2.6% in 2015,<br />

<strong>and</strong> -3.9% in 2050 for scenario FSEGa (tech1)) needs to be increased fur<strong>the</strong>r by a factor of 1.4 to include <strong>the</strong> feedback of CH4 concentrations on lifetime (Pra<strong>the</strong>r,<br />

1994; IPCC, 1996). It is <strong>the</strong>n applied to <strong>the</strong> IS92a CH4 abundance to calculate <strong>the</strong> reduction in CH4 concentration that can be attributed to aircraft. The CH4<br />

perturbation is assumed to be instantaneous; in reality, however, it takes a couple of decades to appear <strong>and</strong> will lag <strong>the</strong> O3 perturbation. For <strong>the</strong> purposes of<br />

interpolating between RF points in Table 6-1, we assume that <strong>the</strong> CH4 perturbation, like <strong>the</strong> O3 perturbation, is proportional to NOx emissions.<br />

6.3.5. Radiative Forcing for H2O<br />

Water vapor is a potent greenhouse gas that is highly variable in <strong>the</strong> troposphere, with a short average residence time controlled by <strong>the</strong> hydrological cycle. In <strong>the</strong><br />

stratosphere, <strong>the</strong> slow turnover of air <strong>and</strong> extreme dryness make precipitation <strong>and</strong> clouds a rare phenomena, leading to smoothly varying concentrations ranging from<br />

3 to 6 ppmv as CH4 is oxidized to H2O (Dessler et al., 1994; Harries et al., 1996). The contribution of aircraft to atmospheric H2O is directly from <strong>the</strong> H in <strong>the</strong> fuel<br />

(assumed to be 14% by mass). Most of <strong>the</strong> subsonic fleet's fuel is burned in <strong>the</strong> troposphere, where this additional source of water is swamped by <strong>the</strong> hydrological<br />

cycle. A smaller fraction is released in <strong>the</strong> stratosphere, where longer residence times may lead to greater accumulation. However, because flight routes are close to<br />

<strong>the</strong> tropopause <strong>and</strong> reach at most into <strong>the</strong> lowermost stratosphere, this effluent is rapidly returned to <strong>the</strong> troposphere with little expected accumulation (Holton et al.,<br />

1995; see also Section 3.3.4).<br />

Although <strong>the</strong> uncertainty of predicting <strong>the</strong> current subsonic RF for water vapor is large-a factor of 3-<strong>the</strong> absolute number in 1992 is estimated to be sufficiently small,<br />

+0.0015 W m-2, making this factor a minor uncertainty in subsonic climate forcing. It is assumed that this value scales linearly with fuel use (see Table 6-1). This value<br />

is consistent with earlier studies: Schumann (1994) <strong>and</strong> Fortuin et al. (1995) estimated that present air traffic enhances background H2O by less than 1.5% for regions<br />

most frequently used by aircraft; likewise, Ponater et al. (1996) <strong>and</strong> Rind et al. (1996) used GCM studies to conclude that <strong>the</strong> direct radiative effect on <strong>the</strong> climate of<br />

water vapor emissions from 1992 air traffic is negligibly small.<br />

http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/sres/aviation/076.htm (1 von 2)08.05.2008 02:43:03

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