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Climate change impacts of US reactive nitrogen

Climate change impacts of US reactive nitrogen
Fossil fuel combustion and fertilizer application in the United States have substantially altered the nitrogen cycle, with serious effects on climate change. The climate effects can be short-lived, by impacting the chemistry of the atmosphere, or long-lived, by altering ecosystem greenhouse gas fluxes. Here we develop a coherent framework for assessing the climate change impacts of US reactive nitrogen emissions, including oxides of nitrogen, ammonia, and nitrous oxide (N 2 O). We use the global temperature potential (GTP), calculated at 20 and 100 y, in units of CO 2 equivalents (CO 2 e), as a common metric. The largest cooling effects are due to combustion sources of oxides of nitrogen altering tropospheric ozone and methane concentrations and enhancing carbon sequestration in forests. The combined cooling effects are estimated at −290 to −510 Tg CO 2 e on a GTP 20 basis. However, these effects are largely short-lived. On a GTP 100 basis, combustion contributes just −16 to −95 Tg CO 2 e. Agriculture contributes to warming on both the 20-y and 100-y timescales, primarily through N 2 O emissions from soils. Under current conditions, these warming and cooling effects partially offset each other. However, recent trends show decreasing emissions from combustion sources. To prevent warming from US reactive nitrogen, reductions in agricultural N 2 O emissions are needed. Substantial progress toward this goal is possible using current technology. Without such actions, even greater CO 2 emission reductions will be required to avoid dangerous climate change.
- Cornell University United States
- Woods Hole Research Center United States
- Department of Climate, Energy and the Environment Ireland
- VA Office of Research and Development United States
- Environmental Protection Agency United States
Climate Change, Temperature, Agriculture, Carbon Dioxide, Models, Theoretical, Nitrogen Cycle, Fires, United States, Ozone, Air Pollution, Nitrogen Oxides, Ecosystem
Climate Change, Temperature, Agriculture, Carbon Dioxide, Models, Theoretical, Nitrogen Cycle, Fires, United States, Ozone, Air Pollution, Nitrogen Oxides, Ecosystem
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