Fuel-efficient cars enough to curb US greenhouse
gases
© News@Nature.com
10-26-04
by Helen Pearson
Today's technology could have immediate impact
on global warming.
The United States could slash its greenhouse
gas emissions by switching to today's fuel-efficient
cars, US scientists have calculated, challenging
the idea that reducing emissions is too expensive
or will require new technologies to be developed.
Many methods have been put forward to curb emissions
of heat-trapping carbon dioxide, such as growing
plantations of trees to soak up the gas. Another
idea is to stop ploughing farm fields, which would
slow the release of carbon dioxide through the
normal bacterial breakdown of plant waste.
Robert
Jackson and William
Schlesinger of Duke University in
Durham, North Carolina, wanted to know how realistic
these proposals really are. Using figures from
previously published studies, they calculated
how widespread such measures would have to be
to slice US carbon emissions by 10%.
If farmers stopped tilling all the cropland in
the country, and either switched to alternative
farming techniques or left land fallow, carbon
emissions would drop by less than 4%, the researchers
report today in Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences1.
In order to hit the 10% target, at least one
third of that land would have to be planted with
forests to sop up carbon dioxide, which would
reduce the food supply and have unknown additional
consequences for the environment. The study shows
that many people expect too much from these methods,
says Jackson: "It points out the limits."
The United States could, however, achieve a 10%
emissions cut by doubling the fuel efficiency
of all cars and sports utility vehicles (SUVs),
Jackson and Schlesinger's estimates show. This
could be done by switching to existing hybrid
electric vehicles, which run partly on electricity.
Although there is a price to pay for cleaner
cars - hybrid vehicles currently cost a few thousand
dollars more than conventional gas-guzzlers -
Jackson says the exercise highlights how small
changes in existing technology could make considerable
dents in US emissions.
"We're trying to say we can do it now, and
relatively cheaply," he says. Additional
price subsidies for consumers, or a hike in gasoline
prices, could encourage drivers to switch to hybrid
vehicles, he suggests.
Showing that cars could make such a big difference
is "really, really important", agrees
Chris Field, a specialist in global climate change
at the Carnegie Institution of Washington in Stanford,
California. "It's a very useful set of calculations,"
he says.
Immediate action
The United States pumps out more greenhouse gases
than any other country in the world. Environmentalists
have criticized President Bush for not taking
more immediate action and for pulling out of the
Kyoto protocol, an international pact to curb
emissions.
The Bush administration focuses instead on voluntary
emission cuts and longer-term improvements in
fuel efficiency, such as moves towards hydrogen-powered
vehicles and nuclear energy. Jackson says that
his study shows that current technology might
have the ability to lower pollution now.
Even if the United States did adopt drastic steps
to clean up, Field says the country would still
struggle to achieve cuts equivalent to those required
of industrialized countries by the Kyoto agreement:
a reduction of at least 5% relative to 1990 levels
by 2012. This equates to a 30% cutback from today's
levels, he says.
No single policy or technology switch can make
such a big dent in US pollution, Field says -
but combined, they might make a real difference.
"The sum of all these is compatible with
finding a solution," he says.
Media Contact: Tim Lucas, 919-613-8084; tdlucas@duke.edu
|