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Quantifying land carbon cycle feedbacks under negative CO 2 emissions
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Abstract. Land and ocean carbon sinks play a major role in regulating
atmospheric CO2 concentration and climate. However, their future
efficiency depends on feedbacks in response to changes in atmospheric
CO2 concentration and climate, namely the concentration–carbon and
climate–carbon feedbacks. Since carbon dioxide removal (CDR) is a key mitigation measure in emission scenarios consistent with global temperature goals in the Paris Agreement, understanding carbon cycle feedbacks under negative CO2 emissions is essential. This study investigates land carbon cycle feedbacks under positive and negative CO2 emissions using an Earth system model of intermediate complexity (EMIC) driven with an idealized scenario of symmetric atmospheric CO2 concentration increase (ramp-up) and decrease (ramp-down), run in three modes. Our results show that the
magnitudes of carbon cycle feedbacks are generally smaller in the
atmospheric CO2 ramp-down phase than in the ramp-up phase, except for
the ocean climate–carbon feedback, which is larger in the ramp-down phase.
This is largely due to carbon cycle inertia: the carbon cycle response in
the ramp-down phase is a combination of the committed response to the prior
atmospheric CO2 increase and the response to decreasing atmospheric
CO2. To isolate carbon cycle feedbacks under decreasing atmospheric
CO2 and quantify these feedbacks more accurately, we propose a novel
approach that uses zero emission simulations to quantify the committed
carbon cycle response. We find that the magnitudes of the concentration–carbon and climate–carbon feedbacks under decreasing
atmospheric CO2 are larger in our novel approach than in the standard
approach. Accurately quantifying carbon cycle feedbacks in scenarios with
negative emissions is essential for determining the effectiveness of carbon
dioxide removal in drawing down atmospheric CO2 and mitigating warming.
Copernicus GmbH
Title: Quantifying land carbon cycle feedbacks under negative CO
2
emissions
Description:
Abstract.
Land and ocean carbon sinks play a major role in regulating
atmospheric CO2 concentration and climate.
However, their future
efficiency depends on feedbacks in response to changes in atmospheric
CO2 concentration and climate, namely the concentration–carbon and
climate–carbon feedbacks.
Since carbon dioxide removal (CDR) is a key mitigation measure in emission scenarios consistent with global temperature goals in the Paris Agreement, understanding carbon cycle feedbacks under negative CO2 emissions is essential.
This study investigates land carbon cycle feedbacks under positive and negative CO2 emissions using an Earth system model of intermediate complexity (EMIC) driven with an idealized scenario of symmetric atmospheric CO2 concentration increase (ramp-up) and decrease (ramp-down), run in three modes.
Our results show that the
magnitudes of carbon cycle feedbacks are generally smaller in the
atmospheric CO2 ramp-down phase than in the ramp-up phase, except for
the ocean climate–carbon feedback, which is larger in the ramp-down phase.
This is largely due to carbon cycle inertia: the carbon cycle response in
the ramp-down phase is a combination of the committed response to the prior
atmospheric CO2 increase and the response to decreasing atmospheric
CO2.
To isolate carbon cycle feedbacks under decreasing atmospheric
CO2 and quantify these feedbacks more accurately, we propose a novel
approach that uses zero emission simulations to quantify the committed
carbon cycle response.
We find that the magnitudes of the concentration–carbon and climate–carbon feedbacks under decreasing
atmospheric CO2 are larger in our novel approach than in the standard
approach.
Accurately quantifying carbon cycle feedbacks in scenarios with
negative emissions is essential for determining the effectiveness of carbon
dioxide removal in drawing down atmospheric CO2 and mitigating warming.
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