Long-term response of oceans to CO2 removal from the atmosphere

Author:  ["Sabine Mathesius","Matthias Hofmann","Ken Caldeira","Hans Joachim Schellnhuber"]

Publication:  Nature Climate Change

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:     Climate environment

Abstract

Carbon dioxide removal (CDR) from the atmosphere has been proposed as a measure for mitigating global warming and ocean acidification. To assess the extent to which CDR might eliminate the long-term consequences of anthropogenic CO2 emissions in the marine environment, we simulate the effect of two massive CDR interventions with CO2 extraction rates of 5 GtC yr−1 and 25 GtC yr−1, respectively, while CO2 emissions follow the extended RCP8.5 pathway. We falsify two hypotheses: the first being that CDR can restore pre-industrial conditions in the ocean by reducing the atmospheric CO2 concentration back to its pre-industrial level, and the second being that high CO2 emissions rates (RCP8.5) followed by CDR have long-term oceanic consequences that are similar to those of low emissions rates (RCP2.6). Focusing on pH, temperature and dissolved oxygen, we find that even after several centuries of CDR deployment, past CO2 emissions would leave a substantial legacy in the marine environment. Simulations show that massive removal of CO2 from the atmosphere through geoengineering will not eliminate the long-term consequences of anthropogenic CO2 emissions in the marine environment.

Cite this article

Mathesius, S., Hofmann, M., Caldeira, K. et al. Long-term response of oceans to CO2 removal from the atmosphere. Nature Clim Change 5, 1107–1113 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2729

View full text

>> Full Text:   Long-term response of oceans to CO2 removal from the atmosphere

An end-to-end assessment of extreme weather impacts on food security

The potential of Indonesian mangrove forests for global climate change mitigation