Considerations for Black Carbon within the Arctic Council Process

"Black carbon (BC) emissions are known to lead to negative health effects as a component of fine particulate matter (PM). BC emissions also lead to climate warming by absorbing incoming and reflected sunlight in the atmosphere and by darkening clouds, snow and ice. In contrast to the long-lived...

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Main Author: The United States Delegation of the Arctic Council
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Arctic Council Secretariat 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11374/860
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spelling ftarcticcouncil:oai:oaarchive.arctic-council.org:11374/860 2023-05-15T14:18:49+02:00 Considerations for Black Carbon within the Arctic Council Process The United States Delegation of the Arctic Council 2008 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11374/860 en eng Arctic Council Secretariat The United States Delegation of the Arctic Council, 2008. Considerations for Black Carbon within the Arctic Council Process. Arctic Council Secretariat, Tromsø: Norway. http://hdl.handle.net/11374/860 Other 2008 ftarcticcouncil 2022-12-19T09:48:35Z "Black carbon (BC) emissions are known to lead to negative health effects as a component of fine particulate matter (PM). BC emissions also lead to climate warming by absorbing incoming and reflected sunlight in the atmosphere and by darkening clouds, snow and ice. In contrast to the long-lived, well-mixed greenhouse gases, BC emissions remain in the atmosphere for a period of only days to weeks, meaning that their atmospheric concentrations are more variable which in turn means the location of mitigation measures can be more important for either regional health reasons or for protecting the Arctic. Organic carbon (OC), which under most conditions has a cooling effect, is always co-emitted with BC in ratios that vary with source type; both are products of incomplete combustion. Nitrogen dioxide and sulfur dioxide, also products of combustion, are often co-emitted with BC and OC and form particles that tend to have a cooling effect. Thus, the net cooling effectiveness of BC emission reductions will depend on the source type as well as the source location. The total climate impact of BC currently in the atmosphere has been estimated to be anywhere from 10% to more than 60% as large as the climate impact from carbon dioxide (CO2). One half to two thirds of the BC impact results from fossil fuels, with the remainder from biomass burning." /./ Other/Unknown Material Arctic Arctic Council Arctic black carbon Arctic Council Repository Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Council Repository
op_collection_id ftarcticcouncil
language English
description "Black carbon (BC) emissions are known to lead to negative health effects as a component of fine particulate matter (PM). BC emissions also lead to climate warming by absorbing incoming and reflected sunlight in the atmosphere and by darkening clouds, snow and ice. In contrast to the long-lived, well-mixed greenhouse gases, BC emissions remain in the atmosphere for a period of only days to weeks, meaning that their atmospheric concentrations are more variable which in turn means the location of mitigation measures can be more important for either regional health reasons or for protecting the Arctic. Organic carbon (OC), which under most conditions has a cooling effect, is always co-emitted with BC in ratios that vary with source type; both are products of incomplete combustion. Nitrogen dioxide and sulfur dioxide, also products of combustion, are often co-emitted with BC and OC and form particles that tend to have a cooling effect. Thus, the net cooling effectiveness of BC emission reductions will depend on the source type as well as the source location. The total climate impact of BC currently in the atmosphere has been estimated to be anywhere from 10% to more than 60% as large as the climate impact from carbon dioxide (CO2). One half to two thirds of the BC impact results from fossil fuels, with the remainder from biomass burning." /./
format Other/Unknown Material
author The United States Delegation of the Arctic Council
spellingShingle The United States Delegation of the Arctic Council
Considerations for Black Carbon within the Arctic Council Process
author_facet The United States Delegation of the Arctic Council
author_sort The United States Delegation of the Arctic Council
title Considerations for Black Carbon within the Arctic Council Process
title_short Considerations for Black Carbon within the Arctic Council Process
title_full Considerations for Black Carbon within the Arctic Council Process
title_fullStr Considerations for Black Carbon within the Arctic Council Process
title_full_unstemmed Considerations for Black Carbon within the Arctic Council Process
title_sort considerations for black carbon within the arctic council process
publisher Arctic Council Secretariat
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/11374/860
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arctic Council
Arctic
black carbon
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Council
Arctic
black carbon
op_relation The United States Delegation of the Arctic Council, 2008. Considerations for Black Carbon within the Arctic Council Process. Arctic Council Secretariat, Tromsø: Norway.
http://hdl.handle.net/11374/860
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