Soot From Forest Fires: Yet One More Amplifying Feedback to Human-Caused Climate Change
8
June, 2014
A
new study produced by Los Alamos National Laboratory has found that
soot from forest fires is a more powerful amplifying feedback to
human caused climate change than previously thought. The study, based
on empirical measurements following the 2011 Los Conchas Fire in the
lab’s vicinity, found that tiny tar balls produced during burning
served to reduce land and air albedo (reflectivity) and resulted in
increased levels of solar absorption.
“We’ve
found that substances resembling tar balls dominate, and even the
soot is coated by organics that focus sunlight,” said senior
laboratory scientist Manvendra Dubey, “Both components can
potentially increase climate warming by increased light absorption.”
An
increasing rate of wildfires is a primary result of human-caused
warming. This feedback releases carbon stocks stored in trees and
flora back into the atmosphere through burning, adding to the already
elevated levels of carbon there. For years, the production of this
feedback has been taken into account in climate models that estimate
future warming. However, the effect of aerosols like the black tar
balls in forest fire soot identified by the Los Alamos study have not
been taken into account.
Previous
climate models counted aerosols as warming-neutral due to the
assumption that black carbon emissions that absorbed sunlight and
heated the land and atmosphere were balanced by organic carbon
aerosol emissions that reflected sunlight and cooled the land and
atmosphere. Unfortunately, the Los Alamos study found that black
carbon tar balls outnumbered organic carbon aerosols by a factor of
10 to 1:
“Most
climate assessment models treat fire emissions as a mixture of pure
soot and organic carbon aerosols that offset the respective warming
and cooling effects of one another on climate,” Dubey explained.
“However Las Conchas results show that tar balls exceed soot by a
factor of 10 and the soot gets coated by organics in fire emissions,
each resulting in more of a warming effect than is currently assumed.
“Tar
balls can absorb sunlight at shorter blue and ultraviolet wavelengths
(also called brown carbon due to the color) and can cause substantial
warming,” he said. “Furthermore, organic coatings on soot act
like lenses that focus sunlight, amplifying the absorption and
warming by soot by a factor of 2 or more. This has a huge impact on
how they should be treated in computer models.”
The
Los Conchas fire emissions study provides new information that may
help improve the accuracy of climate models going forward. Sadly,
it’s bad news to find yet more evidence of sensitivity via
amplifying feedbacks in the Earth climate system. Black carbon is
also a subject of concern because it coats ice sheets, thereby
reducing their overall resilience and reflectivity. In a recent
expedition to Greenland, Dr. Jason Box and associates are attempting
to measure the effects black carbon soot, some of it from forest
fires, have on the great ice sheets there.
“The
fact that we are experiencing more fires and that climate change may
increase fire frequency underscores the need to include these
specialized particles in the computer models, and our results show
how this can be done,” Dubey said.
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