FWIW I favour not burning fossil fuels, and I think that there is a reasonable chance that anthropogenic CO2 production is a significant contributor to atmospheric CO2 levels, the numbers seem to be at least of the same order.
But what I 'think' has no effect on the world. If I wish to persuade other people to reduce CO2 emissions then the program I suggested above is an essential step.
Have these calculations or measurements been done and proved to be robust?
There also seems to be a problem of interpretation.
The atmospheric component of the carbon cycle is X tonnes/year. The total atmospheric CO2 content is Y tonnes. Therefore the mean life of CO2 in the atmosphere is Z years.
Z=Y/X Not a hard sum to do.
According to Nasa
X=121.3 GT/y
Y=750 GT
So Z is 6 years. Hard to reconcile that with a half life of 100.
In 150 years, if those figures were unchanged, we'd have added 150*5.5=800 GT to the atmosphere, doubling the concentration. In fact the concentration has increased by 50%, which is what I meant by the 'same order' above.
At the same time, we know that the current CO2 levels are extremely low, and that historically thay have gone up and down by far more without our involvement.
Cheers
Greg Locock
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