EPA leaves out the most vital number in their fact sheet

EPA_by_the_numbers0.02°C Temperature Rise Averted: The Vital Number Missing from the EPA’s “By the Numbers” Fact Sheet

By Paul C. “Chip” Knappenberger and Patrick J. Michaels

Last week, the Obama Administration’s U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) unveiled a new set of proposed regulations aimed at reducing carbon dioxide emissions from existing U. S. power plants. The motivation for the EPA’s plan comes from the President’s desire to address and mitigate anthropogenic climate change.

We hate to be the party poopers, but the new regulations will do no such thing.

The EPA’s regulations seek to limit carbon dioxide emissions from electricity production in the year 2030 to a level 30 percent below what they were in 2005. It is worth noting that power plant CO2 emissions already dropped by about 15% from 2005 to2012, largely, because of market forces which favor less-CO2-emitting natural gas over coal as the fuel of choice for producing electricity. Apparently the President wants to lock in those gains and manipulate the market to see that the same decline takes place in twice the time.  Nothing like government intervention to facilitate market inefficiency. But we digress.

The EPA highlighted what the plan would achieve in their “By the Numbers” Fact Sheet that accompanied their big announcement.

For some reason, they left off their Fact Sheet how much climate change would be averted by the plan. Seems like a strange omission since, after all, without the threat of climate change, there would be no one thinking about the forced abridgement of our primary source of power production in the first place, and the Administration’s new emissions restriction scheme wouldn’t even be a gleam in this or any other president’s eye.

But no worries.  What the EPA left out, we’ll fill in.

Using a simple, publically-available, climate model emulator called MAGICC that was in part developed through support of the EPA, we ran the numbers as to how much future temperature rise would be averted by a complete adoption and adherence to the EPA’s new carbon dioxide restrictions*.

The answer? Less than two one-hundredths of a degree Celsius by the year 2100.

0.018°C to be exact.

We’re not even sure how to put such a small number into practical terms, because, basically, the number is so small as to be undetectable.

Which, no doubt, is why it’s not included in the EPA Fact Sheet.

It is not too small, however, that it shouldn’t play a huge role in every and all discussions of the new regulations.

*********

* Details and Additional Information about our Calculation

We have used the Model for the Assessment of Greenhouse-gas Induced Climate Change (MAGICC)—a simple climate model emulator that was, in part, developed through support of the EPA—to examine the climate impact of proposed regulations.

MAGICC version 6 is available as an on-line tool.

We analyzed the climate impact of the new EPA regulations by modifying future emissions scenarios that have been established by the United Nation’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), to reflect the new EPA proposed emissions targets.

Specifically, the three IPCC scenarios we examined were the Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) named RCP4.5, RCP 6.0 and RCP8.5.  RCP4.5 is a low-end emissions pathway, RCP6.0 is more middle of the road, and RCP8.5 is a high-end pathway.

The emissions prescriptions in the RCPs are not broken down on a country by country basis, but rather are defined for country groupings.  The U.S. is included in the OECD90 group.

To establish the U.S. emissions pathway within each RPC, we made the following assumptions:

1) U.S. carbon dioxide emissions make up 50 percent of the OECD90 carbon dioxide emissions.

2) Carbon dioxide emissions from electrical power production make up 40 percent of the total U.S. carbon dioxide emissions.

Figure 1 shows the carbon dioxide emissions pathways of the original RCPs along with our determination within each of the contribution from U.S. electricity production.

Figure 1. Carbon dioxide emissions pathways defined in, or derived from, the original set of Representative Concentration pathways (RCPs), for the global total carbon dioxide emissions as well as for the carbon dioxide emissions attributable to U.S. electricity production.

As you can pretty quickly tell, the projected contribution of U.S. carbon dioxide emissions from electricity production to the total global carbon dioxide emissions is vanishingly small.

The new EPA regulations apply to the lower three lines in Figure 1.

To examine the impact of the EPA proposal, we replace the emissions attributable to U.S. power plants in the original RCPs with targets defined in the new EPA regulations. We determined those targets to be (according to the EPA’s Regulatory Impacts Analysis accompanying the regulation), 0.4864 GtC in 2020 and 0.4653 GtC in 2030.  Thereafter, the U.S. power plant emissions were held constant at the 2030 levels until they fell below those levels in the original RCP prescriptions (specifically, that occurred in 2060 in RPC4.5, 2100 in RCP6.0, and sometime after 2150 in RCP8.5).

We then used MAGICC to calculate the rise in global temperature projected to occur between now and the year 2100 when with the original RCPs as well as with the RCPs modified to reflect the EPA proposed regulations (we used the MAGICC default value for the earth’s equilibrium climate sensitivity (3.0°C)).

The output from the six MAGICC runs is depicted as Figure 2.

Figure 2. Global average surface temperature anomalies, 2000-2100, as projected by MAGICC run with the original RCPs as well as with the set of RCPs modified to reflect the EPA 30% emissions reductions from U.S power plants.

In case you can’t tell the impact by looking at Figure 2 (since the lines are basically on top of one another), we’ve summarized the numbers in Table 1.

In Table 2, we quantify the amount of projected temperature rise that is averted by the new EPA regulations.

The rise in projected future temperature rise that is averted by the proposed EPA restrictions of carbon dioxide emissions from existing power plants is less than 0.02°C between now and the end of the century assuming the IPCC’s middle-of-the-road future emissions scenario.

While the proposed EPA plan seeks only to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, in practice, the goal is to reduce the burning of coal. Reducing the burning of coal will have co-impacts such as reducing other climatically active trace gases and particulate matter (or its precursors). We did not model the effects of changes in these co-species as sensitivity tests using MAGICC indicate the collective changes in these co-emissions are quite small and largely cancel each other out.

Global Science Report is a feature from the Center for the Study of Science, where we highlight one or two important new items in the scientific literature or the popular media. For broader and more technical perspectives, consult our monthly “Current Wisdom.”


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Political Junkie
June 12, 2014 7:59 am

Americans (I mean of the U.S. variety) are not the only ones with a problem trying to persuade their government to justify CO2 reduction projects in terms of temperature, rather than tonnes of emissions averted.
Ontario’s Ministry of the Environment published the following gem under the heading “Protecting the Environment One Sweater at a Time.” The article explained – “If every Canadian turned down their thermostat in the winter we could save 2.2 megatonnes of carbon dioxide per year…”
To date, my question to the ministry about the numerical impact on global temperature of Gaia loving Canadians wearing sweaters in the house remains unanswered. (I suspect that the temperature number is trivial but that a scheming nefarious Canadian sweater lobby has bribed key Ministry officials – the world needs to know.)

Dave
June 12, 2014 8:04 am

Atmoshperic density on Venus is more of a culprit than atmospheric composition.
Same reason its warmer at sea level than at altitude here on Earth.

nc
June 12, 2014 8:14 am

Kit you missed the part where EPA’s own model was used to show information they conveniently leave out.

DMA
June 12, 2014 8:16 am

If Professor Murry Salby is right there is no correlation between atmospheric CO2 concentration and anthropogenic emissions as the variation in natural sinks and sources is so much greater than the human addition it gets lost in the mix. So what is the EPA trying to control ? Not to diminish the work that went into this article, but the calculations are based on the assumption that atmospheric concentration is controlled by human emissions, so they not only are miniscule but based on flawed understanding of the atmosphere so they are ultimately meaningless.

John Slayton
June 12, 2014 8:20 am

Kit Carruthers says:
Wow, an article which uses a model as the basis for it’s argument…
It’s called reductio ad absurdum, KC. See if you can capture that and store it somewhere safe.
: > )

Resourceguy
June 12, 2014 8:29 am

The Green Agenda is really donor group greenbacks from the Party perspective.

Resourceguy
June 12, 2014 8:34 am

It was all the CIA employees at EPA that left out the key number.

Tim
June 12, 2014 8:36 am

Many old people will die of exposure. Perhaps that’s the desired result.

Fred
June 12, 2014 8:40 am

Obama’s concern for the environment is a charade. The government’s insatiable desire for more power and control is the real motive behind the war on carbon. Obama like all those before him fully support the greed driven growth of the economy requiring massive consumption of energy. The energy policy embraced by the greed brains is to burn everything and burn it quick before someone else does. Saving energy has been a fantastic excuse for more governemnt regulations, but no energy is being saved. All the energy produced is burned just as fast. Just as saving the environment means plowing up millions more acres just so biofuel can be burned in megasized SUVs. Obama is a joke and anybody who buys his agenda is a fool.

Michael
June 12, 2014 8:51 am

TedEZello, trolling, says: “CO2 in the atmosphere is good for us. That’s why Venus is such a paradise.”
Non-sequitur. Up to a point CO2 is neither helpful nor harmful to “us”, it is a trace gas. Indirectly, as others have pointed out, it is vital. Without it the carbon cycle ends and so do we.
Whether any place is a paradise depends on your personal definition of paradise. I find Iceland to be paradise, your mileage will probably vary. Some people prefer warmer places; Venus is warmer — and considerably closer to the sun (duh).

artwest
June 12, 2014 9:06 am

I wonder if anyone has ever done a survey or vox pop of the general public asking them by how much they think the average temperature has risen during, say, the last century. I suspect most people’s answers would be several degrees of warming and almost all wildly higher than even the most tortured data suggests.
After all the propaganda I would have thought most people would be surprised by the “real” number and wonder what all the fuss was about.

David Jay
June 12, 2014 9:38 am

Yea, but .018C is more than .03F, so… so there is… umm…
RACIST!

Gmogs
June 12, 2014 9:59 am

I´m starting to think that the difference between the forecasted temperature and reality is going to be explained by the alarmist cadre by costly goverment plans that take insane amounts of money -and litteraly do nothing-. So when no excess warming is found they´ll say, print and indoctrinate:
You are welcome! I just saved you there from +0.02 C – or whatever number they label their programs – . Can´t stay for the million thanksters saved from certain modeled doom, I have to jet out to pick up my Nobel! I´ll send you postcards because remember, it is YOU who shouldn´t make any carbon footprint! Last request: Please, please, if you have sufficient enviromental awareness syndrome, stop your breath and save the Earth!

DesertYote
June 12, 2014 10:04 am

“The motivation for the EPA’s plan comes from the President’s desire to address and mitigate free market capitalism.”
This is not part of any “green” agenda. The Agenda is entirely red. That is why this war can never be won on the strength of science. The enemy is not using it in the first place. They are willing to lie, kill, and destroy the minds of our children, in order to achieve there goal.

June 12, 2014 11:01 am

Reblogged this on Sierra Foothill Commentary and commented:
Remember when pumping gas that the EPA forced up the price of fuel for no environmental benefit. You are maying for nothing but EPA hubris.

June 12, 2014 11:39 am

David Ball says:
@TedEZello:
You see what happens when people learn their science from television.
Perfect answer. TedEZello is a low information voter, and not up to this site’s minimum education standards. He’s a Bill Nye kinda guy.

June 12, 2014 11:43 am

latecommer2014 says:
June 12, 2014 at 7:13 am
I believe we do damage to our POV by stating that CO2 can not by its self cause warming.
==========
I state categorically that CO2 by itself can not cause warming. I state that with no fear of contradiction.

ripshin
Editor
June 12, 2014 11:46 am

To facilitate the comparison of the effects of CO2 on Venus to those on Earth, lets look at their respective amounts:
– Venus: 965,000 ppm
– Earth: 400 ppm
Upon review, I’m going to forward a motion to table all further comparisons between Venus and Earth due to the need to reduce the level of absurdity in this debate.
rip

motogeek
June 12, 2014 12:02 pm

Sorry if I missed it, but also Venus is a lot closer to the sun. If we could somehow swap Earth and Venus locations in the solar system, I wonder how well our paradise would fare… especially considering nearly 2x the energy from incoming sunlight at that distance…
Also, Mars is around the same concentration of CO2 as Venus… doesn’t seem too hot to me…

Editor
June 12, 2014 12:09 pm

Chip and Patrick, my thanks for a very clear, very detailed analysis. It will be hard for anyone to poke holes in your figures.
I’m sure you know this, but for others, this estimate is a “best-case” estimate, and that there is no certainty that we will see any temperature change at all.
w.

June 12, 2014 12:43 pm

… And yet MSM never asked the most obvious question addressed by this article – how much AGW will this avert ?
If there was any doubt MSM is just a mouth piece for politicians & similar ilk pushing agendas, that should erase that.
I love how the authors totally destroy the benefits of reducing “carbon pollution ” ( as the current administration likes to call it) using the tools provided by administration . Ouch !

DesertYote
June 12, 2014 12:52 pm

motogeek says:
June 12, 2014 at 12:02 pm
Sorry if I missed it, but also Venus is a lot closer to the sun. If we could somehow swap Earth and Venus locations in the solar system, I wonder how well our paradise would fare… especially considering nearly 2x the energy from incoming sunlight at that distance…
Also, Mars is around the same concentration of CO2 as Venus… doesn’t seem too hot to me…
###
One of the main differences that has a real significance on our atmosphere is the existence of our ridiculously oversize moon. It also was a lot closer originally, stripping off massive quantities of gasses. Not only this, but the catastrophic events that created our moon in the first place make any comparison between Venus and Earth is silly in the extreme.

Joseph Bastardi
June 12, 2014 12:57 pm

Their 3 lines of Evidence ARE FACTUALLY WRONG
http://patriotpost.us/opinion/19138

richard verney
June 12, 2014 1:17 pm

TedEZello says:
June 12, 2014 at 6:53 am
////////////////////
Mars broadly has the same percentage of Co2 in its atmoshere, and yet it is damned cold.
It would appear that the high temps on Venus are not due to CO2, just like the low temps on Mars are not due to CO2.