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Investigating the importance of methane for future climate change: wetland methane emissions, the permafrost carbon feedback, and methane mitigation

Resource type
Thesis type
(Thesis) Ph.D.
Date created
2021-01-18
Authors/Contributors
Abstract
Methane (CH4) is a major greenhouse gas (GHG), second only to carbon dioxide (CO2) in the contribution to historical climate forcing. Yet, the level of understanding of how CH4 will influence the future climate remains low because CH4 processes are generally not represented in Earth system models used for future climate projections. The objective of this thesis is to investigate the importance of CH4 for future climate change with a focus on CH4 mitigation as well as wetland CH4 emissions from thawing permafrost soils, and their respective impact on global warming. The thesis includes a description of a new model for wetland CH4 emissions implemented in an Earth system model of intermediate complexity (EMIC) and applications of the EMIC (including a simplified representation of the CH4 cycle) to: (i) investigate the importance of CH4 mitigation to comply with stringent global warming limits, and (ii) project the additional warming due to wetland CH4 emissions from previously frozen carbon following gradual permafrost thaw over the next three centuries. Salient results of this thesis are: (i) immediate cuts in anthropogenic CH4 emissions, alongside CO2 mitigation, are needed to increase the likelihood of limiting global warming to 2°C above pre-industrial levels; (ii) the warming due to wetland CH4 emissions from thawing permafrost soils is projected to be small (
Document
Identifier
etd21268
Copyright statement
Copyright is held by the author(s).
Permissions
This thesis may be printed or downloaded for non-commercial research and scholarly purposes.
Supervisor or Senior Supervisor
Thesis advisor: Zickfeld, Kirsten
Language
English
Member of collection
Download file Size
input_data\21091\etd21268.pdf 2.5 MB

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