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Carbon footprinting
A presentation by Peter Mumford, 15/04/2015
Part 1: Introduction to carbon
footprinting
Carbon footprinting – what is it?
• Aim is to quantify the total contribution to the
greenhouse effect of a product, service etc
• All direct and indirect contributions considered,
including manufacture, operation,
decomissioning.
• By its nature, this is an approximate science –
however, produces answers to a great enough
accuracy to be useful
• Remember, what matters for climate change is
cumulative emissions (i.e. the accumulation of all
of the little bits of emissions into the atmosphere)
Some basic CO2e quantities
What do I release if I burn (at sea level)....
1 pint of petrol
1kg CO2e
=
1 chick pea’s
volume of petrol
1g CO2e
=
500 litres of
petrol
1 tonne
CO2e
=
Some basic CO2e quantities
1 paperback book
1kg CO2e
=
7 pints cold tap
water
1g CO2e
=
Flying London to
Athens and back
again (per
passenger)
1 tonne
CO2e
=
What is required of developed countries?
• Context: Paris Climate agreement
“Holding the increase in the global average temperature
to well below 2 °C above pre-industrial levels” (Article 2)
• Considering that developing countries’
emissions will peak later than rich countries
(Article 4):
• To have 67% chance of staying under 2
degrees, developed countries need to achieve:
• 10% decreases in CO2e emissions year-on-year (UK
achieved 2% last year)
• Total decarbonisation of energy sector (i.e. nuclear
and/or renewables only) by 2035/2040
Energy
TOTAL (not just electricity) energy consumption UK
Transport
Heating In all low-carbon
plans, as much of
these are electrified as
possible (with low-
carbon electricity)
Domestic energy use
Gas
Electricity
Heating – thermostat and
insulation!
Cooking
Electricity: 1 kiloWatt hour (kWh)
Onshore
wind: 12g
Gas: 460g
Most other
renewables
<50g
Coal: 1000g
Nuclear
fission: ~20g Gas with Carbon
Capture &
Storage: 70-
240g?
0g 1000g250g 750g500g
CO2e
Coal with Carbon
Capture & Storage:
100-400g?
Green Tariffs...??
UK grid electricity
• Nuclear is never switched off or turned down (takes weeks!).
• “Wind energy, with very low running costs, is generally used whenever it is
available” (IME report, 2014)
• Gas & coal are used to fill in the rest
• Therefore, every unit of electricity you save is a fossil-fuel-generated unit!
Awesome.
Electronics
1 email (no
attachment):
4g
1 email (big
attachment):
50g
Laptop + 2
monitors
for 1
workday:
500g
(1kWh)
0g 250g 750g500g 1000g
One hour
TV: 70g
Leaving
projector
on
overnight:
>1500g
CO2e
Transport
Transport: Travelling 1 mile
Cereal-
powered:
90g
Bacon-
powered:
200g
Well-used
city bus:
150g
Typical
train/tube:
150g
Small car
@ 60mph:
350g
Average
car: 700g
Landrover
discovery
@ 90mph:
2200g
Aircraft:
400g
Charged with
average UK
grid: 260g
Charged with
renewables /
nuclear: 130g
Electric car
Approx 1/3 of CO2e
is embedded
(manufacture)
1000g0g 250g 750g500g
CO2e
17
Aviation growth?
Food & Drink
Food & Drink
Strawberries:
150g punnet in season
1800g punnet out-of-season
Beer:
300g local brew from pub
500g pint of lager
900g bottle of beer from the
shop
Bowl of porridge:
80g (water only)
300g (half milk)
550g (all milk)
CO2e
0g 250g 750g500g 1000g
1 can Coke or 1
bottle water:
170g
1 glass
bottle
Coke: 360g
In general:
• Local in-season fruit & veg good
• Cereals/wheat/oats good
• Chickens, pigs, rice, dairy not as good
• Sheep, cows (ruminants), out-of-season soft fruit etc worst!
Effect of diet on emissions
http://shrinkthatfootprint.com/food-carbon-footprint-diet
Tea & Coffee
CO2e
0g 250g 750g500g 1000g
Tea with milk:
60g
Large
cappuccino:
230g
Herbal/black
tea: 25g
Large latte:
340g
Soya milk better?
Yes if does not
contribute to
deforestation (check
first!)
The milk in a cup of tea
is higher-carbon than
heating the water!
Black coffee:
25g
Palm Oil: 1 hectare of deforestation
= 8.5 tonnes CO2e.
Part 3: Analysis
Personal carbon consumption
NB I don’t own a
car but useful to
show relative
contribution (3
tonnes)
Categories of influence on
emissions
• Direct: Ways that you can, on the day, directly
reduce emissions (e.g. use less electricity,
don’t take the car)
• Indirect: Ways that you can, by reducing
demand, reduce emissions (e.g. not fly/get the
bus). Also ‘pester power’
• Strategic/political: emissions that largely only
e.g. governments have significant influence
over (e.g. industry, electrifying transport (?),
decarbonising electricity grid (?))
Personal carbon consumption: by influence
Direct influence
Indirect influence
Strategic
Which slices can be decarbonised?
Influenced by UK grid
carbon intensity
Not influenced by UK
grid carbon intensity
Blue wedges can be theoretically ‘decarbonised’; brown wedges cannot...?
Implications: Inter-generational justice
• UK climate policy is
incompatible with the
Paris agreement
• Under current
emissions rates, no
carbon budget will be
left for our children and
certainly for our grand-
children
Climate Change: The messy desk analogy
CO2e
• You can *only* add to the mess
• You can’t ‘clean up’ like some other pollution
• Emissions accumulate in the atmosphere year-on-
year
• Temperature rise relative to total emissions
CO2 emissions per person – by country
What will current international commitments (“INDCs”)
achieve?
and finally...climate change
• IPCC emissions scenarios
• IPCC reports on four emission scenarios
• Lowest (RCP2.6) is the only one in which we stay under 2
degrees
• Highest is unabated emissions (RCP8.5, leading to >4
degrees) , with two intermediate scenarios
Emissions are tracking above IPCC worst-case
http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/v3/n1/full/nclimate1783.html?WT.ec_i
d=NCLIMATE-201301
• Emissions are
currently tracking
ABOVE the worst-
case scenario
modelled by the
IPCC
35
Oil use in UK
Domestic
production
Imports
How we use
it: mainly
road
transport
CO2e in the office

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Carbon footprints presentation_v4

  • 1. Carbon footprinting A presentation by Peter Mumford, 15/04/2015
  • 2. Part 1: Introduction to carbon footprinting
  • 3. Carbon footprinting – what is it? • Aim is to quantify the total contribution to the greenhouse effect of a product, service etc • All direct and indirect contributions considered, including manufacture, operation, decomissioning. • By its nature, this is an approximate science – however, produces answers to a great enough accuracy to be useful • Remember, what matters for climate change is cumulative emissions (i.e. the accumulation of all of the little bits of emissions into the atmosphere)
  • 4. Some basic CO2e quantities What do I release if I burn (at sea level).... 1 pint of petrol 1kg CO2e = 1 chick pea’s volume of petrol 1g CO2e = 500 litres of petrol 1 tonne CO2e =
  • 5. Some basic CO2e quantities 1 paperback book 1kg CO2e = 7 pints cold tap water 1g CO2e = Flying London to Athens and back again (per passenger) 1 tonne CO2e =
  • 6.
  • 7. What is required of developed countries? • Context: Paris Climate agreement “Holding the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2 °C above pre-industrial levels” (Article 2) • Considering that developing countries’ emissions will peak later than rich countries (Article 4): • To have 67% chance of staying under 2 degrees, developed countries need to achieve: • 10% decreases in CO2e emissions year-on-year (UK achieved 2% last year) • Total decarbonisation of energy sector (i.e. nuclear and/or renewables only) by 2035/2040
  • 9. TOTAL (not just electricity) energy consumption UK Transport Heating In all low-carbon plans, as much of these are electrified as possible (with low- carbon electricity)
  • 10. Domestic energy use Gas Electricity Heating – thermostat and insulation! Cooking
  • 11. Electricity: 1 kiloWatt hour (kWh) Onshore wind: 12g Gas: 460g Most other renewables <50g Coal: 1000g Nuclear fission: ~20g Gas with Carbon Capture & Storage: 70- 240g? 0g 1000g250g 750g500g CO2e Coal with Carbon Capture & Storage: 100-400g?
  • 13. UK grid electricity • Nuclear is never switched off or turned down (takes weeks!). • “Wind energy, with very low running costs, is generally used whenever it is available” (IME report, 2014) • Gas & coal are used to fill in the rest • Therefore, every unit of electricity you save is a fossil-fuel-generated unit! Awesome.
  • 14. Electronics 1 email (no attachment): 4g 1 email (big attachment): 50g Laptop + 2 monitors for 1 workday: 500g (1kWh) 0g 250g 750g500g 1000g One hour TV: 70g Leaving projector on overnight: >1500g CO2e
  • 16. Transport: Travelling 1 mile Cereal- powered: 90g Bacon- powered: 200g Well-used city bus: 150g Typical train/tube: 150g Small car @ 60mph: 350g Average car: 700g Landrover discovery @ 90mph: 2200g Aircraft: 400g Charged with average UK grid: 260g Charged with renewables / nuclear: 130g Electric car Approx 1/3 of CO2e is embedded (manufacture) 1000g0g 250g 750g500g CO2e
  • 19. Food & Drink Strawberries: 150g punnet in season 1800g punnet out-of-season Beer: 300g local brew from pub 500g pint of lager 900g bottle of beer from the shop Bowl of porridge: 80g (water only) 300g (half milk) 550g (all milk) CO2e 0g 250g 750g500g 1000g 1 can Coke or 1 bottle water: 170g 1 glass bottle Coke: 360g In general: • Local in-season fruit & veg good • Cereals/wheat/oats good • Chickens, pigs, rice, dairy not as good • Sheep, cows (ruminants), out-of-season soft fruit etc worst!
  • 20. Effect of diet on emissions http://shrinkthatfootprint.com/food-carbon-footprint-diet
  • 21. Tea & Coffee CO2e 0g 250g 750g500g 1000g Tea with milk: 60g Large cappuccino: 230g Herbal/black tea: 25g Large latte: 340g Soya milk better? Yes if does not contribute to deforestation (check first!) The milk in a cup of tea is higher-carbon than heating the water! Black coffee: 25g
  • 22. Palm Oil: 1 hectare of deforestation = 8.5 tonnes CO2e.
  • 24. Personal carbon consumption NB I don’t own a car but useful to show relative contribution (3 tonnes)
  • 25. Categories of influence on emissions • Direct: Ways that you can, on the day, directly reduce emissions (e.g. use less electricity, don’t take the car) • Indirect: Ways that you can, by reducing demand, reduce emissions (e.g. not fly/get the bus). Also ‘pester power’ • Strategic/political: emissions that largely only e.g. governments have significant influence over (e.g. industry, electrifying transport (?), decarbonising electricity grid (?))
  • 26. Personal carbon consumption: by influence Direct influence Indirect influence Strategic
  • 27. Which slices can be decarbonised? Influenced by UK grid carbon intensity Not influenced by UK grid carbon intensity Blue wedges can be theoretically ‘decarbonised’; brown wedges cannot...?
  • 28. Implications: Inter-generational justice • UK climate policy is incompatible with the Paris agreement • Under current emissions rates, no carbon budget will be left for our children and certainly for our grand- children
  • 29. Climate Change: The messy desk analogy CO2e • You can *only* add to the mess • You can’t ‘clean up’ like some other pollution • Emissions accumulate in the atmosphere year-on- year • Temperature rise relative to total emissions
  • 30. CO2 emissions per person – by country
  • 31. What will current international commitments (“INDCs”) achieve?
  • 32.
  • 33. and finally...climate change • IPCC emissions scenarios • IPCC reports on four emission scenarios • Lowest (RCP2.6) is the only one in which we stay under 2 degrees • Highest is unabated emissions (RCP8.5, leading to >4 degrees) , with two intermediate scenarios
  • 34. Emissions are tracking above IPCC worst-case http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/v3/n1/full/nclimate1783.html?WT.ec_i d=NCLIMATE-201301 • Emissions are currently tracking ABOVE the worst- case scenario modelled by the IPCC
  • 35. 35 Oil use in UK Domestic production Imports How we use it: mainly road transport
  • 36. CO2e in the office

Editor's Notes

  1. It's an analogy to illustrate the causes of climate change.   The desk represents the atmosphere. In the presentation I talked through the following:   In most pollution situations, we tend to think of the problem like a messy desk. So, yes it's bad if we mess up the desk, but it's OK because ultimately we'll usually be able to clean up the mess if we put our minds to it (hence the dustpan & brush). Climate change, however, has one key difference: we have no way of extracting the pollution (CO2) from the atmosphere and CO2 hangs about for 100s or 1000s of years. As soon as we create emissions, that's that: the horse has bolted and we can't clean them up. No dustpan & brush!* Fundamentally the only metric which influences the greenhouse effect (and hence warming which will happen) is cumulative emissions. As this is a fairly abstract concept, the messy desk helps. In the analogy, the only thing that matters is the TOTAL amount of mess which has built up on the desk. This now helps to put the required actions on emissions in perspective. Reducing annual emissions by, say, 10% might sound impressive, but all it means is you are adding 9 dirty mugs to the desk every day instead of 10. This then helps to explain why such large magnitudes of emissions reductions are required to keep cumulative emissions to a level which MAY prevent dangerous/catastrophic climate change. On an annual emissions graph, it's the area under the curve which matters; on the messy desk, it's the total amount of mess. Current government commitments (the Copenhagen Accord) imply that a greater proportion of the remaining allowable desk mess (aka carbon budget) will be allocated to developing countries (non-Annex 1 countries). The Tyndall Centre has made an effort to quantify the implications of this split of the carbon budget in light of the 2 degree target. Kevin Anderson presented these results in an Arup-sponsored event in Manchester in 2012 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KumLH9kOpOI The answer is that developed countries (Annex 1 countries) have such a small slice of the pie that they would need to reduce emissions year-on-year by 10%, starting in 2012. They would also need to almost totally decarbonise their energy generation sectors by 2035-2040 (i.e. nuclear and renewables only). The implications for the projects that we work on day-to-day are that for Annex 1 countries to contribute to their commitments (and for a outside chance of meeting 2 degrees), every single project we are involved in in Annex 1 countries from now on should be true carbon-neutral (considering both construction and operational carbon). How do we achieve this? A fascinating question...
  2. It's an analogy to illustrate the causes of climate change.   The desk represents the atmosphere. In the presentation I talked through the following:   In most pollution situations, we tend to think of the problem like a messy desk. So, yes it's bad if we mess up the desk, but it's OK because ultimately we'll usually be able to clean up the mess if we put our minds to it (hence the dustpan & brush). Climate change, however, has one key difference: we have no way of extracting the pollution (CO2) from the atmosphere and CO2 hangs about for 100s or 1000s of years. As soon as we create emissions, that's that: the horse has bolted and we can't clean them up. No dustpan & brush!* Fundamentally the only metric which influences the greenhouse effect (and hence warming which will happen) is cumulative emissions. As this is a fairly abstract concept, the messy desk helps. In the analogy, the only thing that matters is the TOTAL amount of mess which has built up on the desk. This now helps to put the required actions on emissions in perspective. Reducing annual emissions by, say, 10% might sound impressive, but all it means is you are adding 9 dirty mugs to the desk every day instead of 10. This then helps to explain why such large magnitudes of emissions reductions are required to keep cumulative emissions to a level which MAY prevent dangerous/catastrophic climate change. On an annual emissions graph, it's the area under the curve which matters; on the messy desk, it's the total amount of mess. Current government commitments (the Copenhagen Accord) imply that a greater proportion of the remaining allowable desk mess (aka carbon budget) will be allocated to developing countries (non-Annex 1 countries). The Tyndall Centre has made an effort to quantify the implications of this split of the carbon budget in light of the 2 degree target. Kevin Anderson presented these results in an Arup-sponsored event in Manchester in 2012 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KumLH9kOpOI The answer is that developed countries (Annex 1 countries) have such a small slice of the pie that they would need to reduce emissions year-on-year by 10%, starting in 2012. They would also need to almost totally decarbonise their energy generation sectors by 2035-2040 (i.e. nuclear and renewables only). The implications for the projects that we work on day-to-day are that for Annex 1 countries to contribute to their commitments (and for a outside chance of meeting 2 degrees), every single project we are involved in in Annex 1 countries from now on should be true carbon-neutral (considering both construction and operational carbon). How do we achieve this? A fascinating question...
  3. It's an analogy to illustrate the causes of climate change.   The desk represents the atmosphere. In the presentation I talked through the following:   In most pollution situations, we tend to think of the problem like a messy desk. So, yes it's bad if we mess up the desk, but it's OK because ultimately we'll usually be able to clean up the mess if we put our minds to it (hence the dustpan & brush). Climate change, however, has one key difference: we have no way of extracting the pollution (CO2) from the atmosphere and CO2 hangs about for 100s or 1000s of years. As soon as we create emissions, that's that: the horse has bolted and we can't clean them up. No dustpan & brush!* Fundamentally the only metric which influences the greenhouse effect (and hence warming which will happen) is cumulative emissions. As this is a fairly abstract concept, the messy desk helps. In the analogy, the only thing that matters is the TOTAL amount of mess which has built up on the desk. This now helps to put the required actions on emissions in perspective. Reducing annual emissions by, say, 10% might sound impressive, but all it means is you are adding 9 dirty mugs to the desk every day instead of 10. This then helps to explain why such large magnitudes of emissions reductions are required to keep cumulative emissions to a level which MAY prevent dangerous/catastrophic climate change. On an annual emissions graph, it's the area under the curve which matters; on the messy desk, it's the total amount of mess. Current government commitments (the Copenhagen Accord) imply that a greater proportion of the remaining allowable desk mess (aka carbon budget) will be allocated to developing countries (non-Annex 1 countries). The Tyndall Centre has made an effort to quantify the implications of this split of the carbon budget in light of the 2 degree target. Kevin Anderson presented these results in an Arup-sponsored event in Manchester in 2012 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KumLH9kOpOI The answer is that developed countries (Annex 1 countries) have such a small slice of the pie that they would need to reduce emissions year-on-year by 10%, starting in 2012. They would also need to almost totally decarbonise their energy generation sectors by 2035-2040 (i.e. nuclear and renewables only). The implications for the projects that we work on day-to-day are that for Annex 1 countries to contribute to their commitments (and for a outside chance of meeting 2 degrees), every single project we are involved in in Annex 1 countries from now on should be true carbon-neutral (considering both construction and operational carbon). How do we achieve this? A fascinating question...
  4. It's an analogy to illustrate the causes of climate change.   The desk represents the atmosphere. In the presentation I talked through the following:   In most pollution situations, we tend to think of the problem like a messy desk. So, yes it's bad if we mess up the desk, but it's OK because ultimately we'll usually be able to clean up the mess if we put our minds to it (hence the dustpan & brush). Climate change, however, has one key difference: we have no way of extracting the pollution (CO2) from the atmosphere and CO2 hangs about for 100s or 1000s of years. As soon as we create emissions, that's that: the horse has bolted and we can't clean them up. No dustpan & brush!* Fundamentally the only metric which influences the greenhouse effect (and hence warming which will happen) is cumulative emissions. As this is a fairly abstract concept, the messy desk helps. In the analogy, the only thing that matters is the TOTAL amount of mess which has built up on the desk. This now helps to put the required actions on emissions in perspective. Reducing annual emissions by, say, 10% might sound impressive, but all it means is you are adding 9 dirty mugs to the desk every day instead of 10. This then helps to explain why such large magnitudes of emissions reductions are required to keep cumulative emissions to a level which MAY prevent dangerous/catastrophic climate change. On an annual emissions graph, it's the area under the curve which matters; on the messy desk, it's the total amount of mess. Current government commitments (the Copenhagen Accord) imply that a greater proportion of the remaining allowable desk mess (aka carbon budget) will be allocated to developing countries (non-Annex 1 countries). The Tyndall Centre has made an effort to quantify the implications of this split of the carbon budget in light of the 2 degree target. Kevin Anderson presented these results in an Arup-sponsored event in Manchester in 2012 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KumLH9kOpOI The answer is that developed countries (Annex 1 countries) have such a small slice of the pie that they would need to reduce emissions year-on-year by 10%, starting in 2012. They would also need to almost totally decarbonise their energy generation sectors by 2035-2040 (i.e. nuclear and renewables only). The implications for the projects that we work on day-to-day are that for Annex 1 countries to contribute to their commitments (and for a outside chance of meeting 2 degrees), every single project we are involved in in Annex 1 countries from now on should be true carbon-neutral (considering both construction and operational carbon). How do we achieve this? A fascinating question...