. GPS News .




.
ENERGY NEWS
Links in the chain: Global carbon emissions and consumption
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Oct 20, 2011

Fossil resources are highly concentrated and that the majority of fuel that is exported winds up in developed countries. Most of the countries that import a lot of fossil fuels also tend to import a lot of products. China is a notable exception to this trend.

It is difficult to measure accurately each nation's contribution of carbon dioxide to the Earth's atmosphere. Carbon is extracted out of the ground as coal, gas, and oil, and these fuels are often exported to other countries where they are burned to generate the energy that is used to make products.

In turn, these products may be traded to still other countries where they are consumed. A team led by Carnegie's Steven Davis, and including Ken Caldeira, tracked and quantified this supply chain of global carbon dioxide emissions. Their work will be published online by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Traditionally, the carbon dioxide emitted by burning fossil fuels is attributed to the country where the fuels were burned.

But until now, there has not yet been a full accounting of emissions taking into consideration the entire supply chain, from where fuels originate all the way to where products made using the fuels are ultimately consumed.

"Policies seeking to regulate emissions will affect not only the parties burning fuels but also those who extract fuels and consume products. No emissions exist in isolation, and everyone along the supply chain benefits from carbon-based fuels," Davis said.

He and Caldeira, along with Glen Peters from the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research in Oslo, Norway, based their analysis on fossil energy resources of coal, oil, natural gas, and secondary fuels traded among 58 industrial sectors and 112 countries in 2004.

They found that fossil resources are highly concentrated and that the majority of fuel that is exported winds up in developed countries. Most of the countries that import a lot of fossil fuels also tend to import a lot of products. China is a notable exception to this trend.

Davis and Caldeira say that their results show that enacting carbon pricing mechanisms at the point of extraction could be efficient and avoid the relocation of industries that could result from regulation at the point of combustion.

Manufacturing of goods may shift from one country to another, but fossil fuel resources are geographically fixed.

They found that regulating the fossil fuels extracted in China, the US, the Middle East, Russia, Canada, Australia, India, and Norway would cover 67% of global carbon dioxide emissions.

The incentive to participate would be the threat of missing out on revenues from carbon-linked tariffs imposed further down the supply chain.

Incorporating gross domestic product into these analyses highlights which countries' economies are most reliant on domestic resources of fossil energy and which economies are most dependent on traded fuels.

"The country of extraction gets to sell their products and earn foreign exchange. The country of production gets to buy less-expensive fuels and therefore sell less-expensive products. The country of consumption gets to buy products at lower cost." Caldeira said.

"However, we all have an interest in preventing the climate risk that the use of these fuels entails."

To look at the data, click here.

Related Links
Carnegie Institution





.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



ENERGY NEWS
Putin hits EU energy market reforms
Moscow (UPI) Oct 19, 2011
The European Union is seeking to force lower natural gas imports prices by "destroying" the current system that ties them to oil prices, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin says. Putin, speaking to state television channels last week in Moscow, accused the EU of attempting to wring lower prices from the state-owned natural gas supplier Gazprom through the market liberation reforms cal ... read more


ENERGY NEWS
Southern Africian farmers using fertilizer trees to improve food security

S Africa to release report on Iraq's oil-for-food

Chinese man charged in theft of US trade secrets

Method of studying roots rarely used in wetlands improves ecosystem research

ENERGY NEWS
A new scheme for photonic quantum computing

Point defects in super-chilled diamonds may offer stable candidates for quantum computing bits

New knowledge about 'flawed' diamonds could speed the development of diamond-based quantum computers

Researchers Realize High-Power, Narrowband Terahertz Source at Room Temperature

ENERGY NEWS
China's aviation sector sees slower growth: report

Aircraft leasing growing in Latin America

Northrop Grumman Extends Airport Realtime Collaboration Capability

Boeing Forecasts 1,250 New Airplanes Needed in Northeast Asia

ENERGY NEWS
Bankruptcy looms larger for Saab as restructuring threatened

Hybrid trucks, buses focus of new Purdue center

Laboratory on Wheels

China auto sales up 5.5% in September

ENERGY NEWS
Colombia a leader in counter-narcotics

Europe warms up to Mercosur, but has terms

US lawmakers aim to lure Chinese, Canadian visitors

Computer chip giant Intel reports record earnings

ENERGY NEWS
Bolivian natives, president in talks stand-off

Bolivian natives reach La Paz after marathon march

Bolivia president offers talks with protest marchers

Bolivian native protest march nears La Paz

ENERGY NEWS
NASA Readies New Type of Earth-Observing Satellite for Launch

Astrium signs new Pleiades contract

New program to expand, enhance use of LIDAR sensing technology

Indra Tries In Madrid And Seville Space Technology To Detect Heat Islands

ENERGY NEWS
Molecular Depth Profiling Modeled Using Buckyballs and Low-Energy Argon

New form of superhard carbon observed

Pear-shaped 110-carat diamond to go under hammer

NIST polishes method for creating tiny diamond machines


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement