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Newly Discovered Greenhouse Gas Is 7,000 Times More Powerful Than CO2

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes "Suzanne Goldenberg writes at The Guardian that researchers at the University of Toronto's department of chemistry have identified a newly discovered greenhouse gas, perfluorotributylamine (PFTBA), in use by the electrical industry since the mid-20th century, that is 7,000 times more powerful than carbon dioxide at warming the Earth. 'We claim that PFTBA has the highest radiative efficiency of any molecule detected in the atmosphere to date,' says Angela Hong. Concentrations of PFTBA in the atmosphere are low – 0.18 parts per trillion in the Toronto area – compared to 400 parts per million for carbon dioxide but PFTBA is long-lived. There are no known processes that would destroy or remove PFTBA in the lower atmosphere so it has a very long lifetime, possibly hundreds of years, and is destroyed in the upper atmosphere. 'It is so much less than carbon dioxide, but the important thing is on a per molecule basis, it is very very effective in interacting with heat from the Earth.' PFTBA has been in use since the mid-20th century for various applications in electrical equipment, such as transistors and capacitors. 'PFTBA is just one example of an industrial chemical that is produced but there are no policies that control its production, use or emission,' says Hong. 'It is not being regulated by any type of climate policy.'"

15 of 216 comments (clear)

  1. Concentrations by i+kan+reed · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Sure, lots of things have a stronger absorption profile than CO2, CH4 is one, but if it even has a hundred thousandth of the emission levels of carbon dioxide, I'd be pretty surprised.

    Still: fix the easy things first.

    1. Re:Concentrations by CastrTroy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly. The current levels are .18 parts per TRILLION, as compared to 400 parts per MILLION for CO2. Convert the CO2 concentration to the same units and you're comparing 0.18 for the new one to 400,000,000 for carbon dioxide. So, even if it does have an effect of 7000 times, that still only makes it comparable to 1260 vs. 400,000,000.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    2. Re:Concentrations by jonnythan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, there are no known processes by which PFTBA is broken down or removed from the atmosphere. So the effect is basically cumulative.

      The other thing is that atmospheric concentrations are already in the 0.18 ppt range. CO2 is about 2,000,000 times more concentrated at the moment, at least in the Toronto area. This means that CO2 still has around 300 times the impact [ballpark figure based on numbers in the article], but if we keep up PTFBA production it could potentially start to be significant.

      "The easy things first" makes sense, but "easy things" and "hard things" aren't always mutually exclusive. And frankly, PTFBA reduction is probably much closer to "easy thing" than CO2 reduction is.

    3. Re:Concentrations by strech · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Did you just randomly combine numbers? Your math has nothing to do with anything.

      .18 parts per trillion = 0.00000018 parts per million for PFTBA, vs 400 parts per million for CO2.

      Even at 7000 times stronger for PFTBA, the PFTBA would be equivalent to
      .00000018 * 7000 = 0.00126 parts per million of carbon, which is
      .00126 / 400 = 0.00000315, or 0.000315 percent of the effect of the CO2.
       

  2. Orders of magnitude by thebes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Obligatory xckd
    http://xkcd.com/558/

    0.18 PPT vs 400 PPM
    0.18 PPT vs 400000000 PPM
    0.00000018 PPM vs 400 PPM

    One of them is deceptive, the other 2 provide proper context. Even being 7000 times more powerful doesn't make up for 6 orders of magnitude in concentration.

  3. Bucky quote by schneidafunk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Pollution is nothing but the resources we are not harvesting. We allow them to disperse because we've been ignorant of their value."

    -R. Buckminster Fuller

    --
    Some people die at 25 and aren't buried until 75. -Benjamin Franklin
  4. Concentrations of PFTBA in the atmosphere are low by ArcadeMan · · Score: 4, Informative

    Concentrations of PFTBA in the atmosphere are low – 0.18 parts per trillion in the Toronto area – compared to 400 parts per million for carbon dioxide but PFTBA is long-lived.

    Yeah, but if it's 7000 times more powerful, than 0.18 parts * 7000 means 1260 parts per trillion compared to 400 parts per... oh wait, million? Who's to blame for this bullshit comparison, the University of Toronto or The Guardian? I guess no answer is needed on that one.

  5. per-molecule isn't really the issue though by Trepidity · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "It is so much less than carbon dioxide, but the important thing is on a per molecule basis, it is very very effective in interacting with heat from the Earth."

    There are a number of gases that are more potent greenhouse gases than carbon dioxide. The issue with carbon dioxide isn't that it has a particularly extreme greenhouse-gas effect, but the combination of two things: 1) it is a somewhat potent greenhouse gas; and 2) we are releasing a huge amount of it at pretty incredible industrial scales. Not a little bit here and there in obscure industrial processes, but through things like coal power plants that literally burn 100 to 200 train cars' worth of coal per day (a typical train car fits ~100 tonnes of coal). The scale is actually pretty impressive, in an old-school, 19th-century industrialism sort of way. The sheer volume of coal these plants burn is such that just keeping it coming regularly is a logistical challenge, and there's a whole industry around technology to unload these 100-car trains in few enough hours that you can get the next one in.

    The short of it is that [potency x volume] is the basic issue. Very potent but miniscule releases aren't that important, though it's worth keeping on eye on them.

  6. Re:Until tomorrow? by Antipater · · Score: 5, Informative

    Given that sulfur hexafluoride has almost triple the potency of this, and has a concentration around 7 ppt, I think that record's already been set.

    --
    Everything is better with chainsaws.
  7. Billions are larger than millions by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 4, Informative

    millions of tons of methane are being dumped into the atmosphere thanks to Gazoprom's leaking pipelines....

    That is undoubtably true. However, billions of tons of carbon dioxide are released into the atmosphere.

    Yet no one gives a hoot because Russia is good while America and their SUVs continue to be targeted by the rest of the jealous world....

    While methane does have a higher infrared cross-section than carbon dioxide, it is not that much higher; it also has a much shorter atmospheric lifetime. While it's useful to address both, it makes to address more attention on the larger factor, and not the smaller.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Billions are larger than millions by Bengie · · Score: 4, Informative

      While methane does have a higher infrared cross-section than carbon dioxide, it is not that much higher;

      http://epa.gov/climatechange/ghgemissions/gases/ch4.html Methane is about 20x more effective than CO2 at greenhouse warming over the period of 100 years. I personally think a 20x increase is more than "not much higher".

    2. Re:Billions are larger than millions by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 5, Informative

      I personally think a 20x increase is more than "not much higher".

      First, my statement was that it is not that much higher. Eliminating the word "that" changes the meaning of the sentence, since the the topic was the difference between millions and billions.

      Second, the infrared absorption of methane is about 21 times higher than that of carbon dioxide. However, the atmospheric lifetime is 12 years, compared to estimates of between 50 and 200 years for carbon dioxide. So it is not true that "methane is about 20x more effective than CO2 at greenhouse warming over the period of 100 years". It is about 20x more effective than CO2 over a period of about 12 years, but drops exponentially to zero after that. (That's expressed per molecule. It's higher if expressed per unit mass emitted, since methane is so much lighter than carbon dioxide.)

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  8. Re:That is what we need to terraform Mars! by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 4, Informative

    That is exactly what we need to terraform Mars! We need to send few tonnes of this stuff to Mars....

    A lot more than a "few tonnes", I'm afraid. I'll also point out that the formula for this is C12F27N-- it has a molecular mass of 671-- that's fifteen times more massive than carbon dioxide molecules. So, per unit MASS it's only 460 times more powerful an infrared absorber than carbon dioxide.

    SF6 is a better infrared-trapping greenhouse gas for Mars.

    Chemical info here, by the way: http://webbook.nist.gov/cgi/cbook.cgi?ID=C311897

    http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/content/dam/sigma-aldrich/structure1/050/mfcd00000436.eps/_jcr_content/renditions/large.png

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  9. Re:Meanwhile in russia by daem0n1x · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yet no one gives a hoot because Russia is good while America and their SUVs continue to be targeted by the rest of the jealous world....

    "Russia is good"? Who the fuck said that? Talk about paranoia...

  10. Literally, my first thought reading the headline by Alsee · · Score: 4, Funny

    Newly Discovered Greenhouse Gas Is 7,000 Times More Powerful Than CO2

    ... emitted whenever a politician speaks.

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    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.