• How much do volcanoes contribute to global warming?

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Mon May 23 08:42:44 2022
    How much do volcanoes contribute to global warming?
    By Maggie Astor, New York Times

    Volcanic activity generates 130 million to 440 million tons
    of carbon dioxide per year, according to the United States
    Geological Survey. Human activity generates about 35 billion
    tons of carbon dioxide per year — 80 times as much as the
    high-end estimate for volcanic activity, and 270 times as
    much as the low-end estimate. And that’s carbon dioxide.
    Human activity also emits other greenhouse gases, like methane,
    in far greater quantities than volcanoes.

    The largest volcanic eruption in the past century was the
    1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines; if an
    explosion that size happened every day, NASA has calculated,
    it would still release only half as much carbon dioxide as
    daily human activity does. The annual emissions from cement
    production alone, one small component of planet-warming human
    activity, are greater than the annual emissions from every
    volcano in the world.

    There is also no evidence that volcanic activity has increased
    over the past 200 years. While there have been more documented
    eruptions, researchers at the Smithsonian Institution’s Global
    Volcanism Program found that this was attributable not to an
    actual trend, but rather to “increases in populations living
    near volcanoes to observe eruptions and improvements in
    communication technologies to report those eruptions.”

    All told, volcanic activity accounts for less than 1% of
    greenhouse gas emissions, which is not enough to contribute
    in any meaningful way to the increase we’ve seen over the past
    200 years. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change found
    in 2013 (see Page 56 of its report) that the climatic effects
    of volcanic activity were “inconsequential” over the scale of
    a century.

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  • From stoney@21:1/5 to David P. on Mon May 30 18:18:11 2022
    On Monday, May 23, 2022 at 11:42:47 PM UTC+8, David P. wrote:
    How much do volcanoes contribute to global warming?
    By Maggie Astor, New York Times

    Volcanic activity generates 130 million to 440 million tons
    of carbon dioxide per year, according to the United States
    Geological Survey. Human activity generates about 35 billion
    tons of carbon dioxide per year — 80 times as much as the
    high-end estimate for volcanic activity, and 270 times as
    much as the low-end estimate. And that’s carbon dioxide.
    Human activity also emits other greenhouse gases, like methane,
    in far greater quantities than volcanoes.

    The largest volcanic eruption in the past century was the
    1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines; if an
    explosion that size happened every day, NASA has calculated,
    it would still release only half as much carbon dioxide as
    daily human activity does. The annual emissions from cement
    production alone, one small component of planet-warming human
    activity, are greater than the annual emissions from every
    volcano in the world.

    There is also no evidence that volcanic activity has increased
    over the past 200 years. While there have been more documented
    eruptions, researchers at the Smithsonian Institution’s Global
    Volcanism Program found that this was attributable not to an
    actual trend, but rather to “increases in populations living
    near volcanoes to observe eruptions and improvements in
    communication technologies to report those eruptions.”

    All told, volcanic activity accounts for less than 1% of
    greenhouse gas emissions, which is not enough to contribute
    in any meaningful way to the increase we’ve seen over the past
    200 years. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change found
    in 2013 (see Page 56 of its report) that the climatic effects
    of volcanic activity were “inconsequential” over the scale of
    a century.

    Volcanoes are natural hot warming pollutants from the air and undersea, too. But warplanes and jet fighters from the USAF flying around its hundred of bases are the biggest polluters contributing to the biggest global warming. But so far US pretends
    nothing of that contributed to it.

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