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Increase in greenhouse gas emissions despite cuts

Updated on: 01 February,2010 03:45 PM IST  | 
IANS |

Scientists have recorded higher emissions of a greenhouse gas thousands of times more efficient at trapping heat than carbon dioxide, in spite of global efforts to curb its release.

Increase in greenhouse gas emissions despite cuts

Scientists have recorded higher emissions of a greenhouse gas thousands of times more efficient at trapping heat than carbon dioxide, in spite of global efforts to curb its release.


The substance HFC-23 is a by product of HCFC-22, a refrigerant in ACs and refrigerators and a starting material for producing heat and chemical-resistant products, cables and coatings.


"Without the international effort to reduce emissions of HFC-23, its emissions and atmospheric abundance would have been even larger in recent years," said Stephen Montzka, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) chemist.


"As it was, emissions in 2006-2008 were about 50 percent above the 1990-2000 average," added Montzka, who led the collaborative study between NOAA and university scientists.

HFC-23 is one of the most potent greenhouse gases emitted as a result of human activities.

Over a 100-year time span, one pound of HFC-23 released into the atmosphere traps heat 14,800 times more effectively than a pound of carbon dioxide.

To date, the total accumulated emission of HFC-23 is small relative to other greenhouse gases, making this gas a minor (less than one percent) contributor to climate change at present.

Because HFC-23 is such a potent greenhouse gas, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) has facilitated the destruction of substantial quantities of HFC-23 in developing countries since 2003.

The study by Montzka and colleagues shows for the first time that even with these actions HFC-23 emissions from developing countries remained substantial compared to recent years, says an NOAA release.

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