英文摘要: | Many future energy and emission scenarios envisage an increase of bioenergy in the global primary energy mix1, 2, 3, 4. In most climate impact assessment models and policies, bioenergy systems are assumed to be carbon neutral, thus ignoring the time lag between CO2 emissions from biomass combustion and CO2 uptake by vegetation5. Here, we show that the temperature peak caused by CO2 emissions from bioenergy is proportional to the maximum rate at which emissions occur and is almost insensitive to cumulative emissions. Whereas the carbon–climate response (CCR; ref. 6) to fossil fuel emissions is approximately constant, the CCR to bioenergy emissions depends on time, biomass turnover times, and emission scenarios. The linearity between temperature peak and bioenergy CO2 emission rates resembles the characteristic of the temperature response to short-lived climate forcers. As for the latter7, 8, 9, the timing of CO2 emissions from bioenergy matters. Under the international agreement to limit global warming to 2 °C by 21003, early emissions from bioenergy thus have smaller contributions on the targeted temperature than emissions postponed later into the future, especially when bioenergy is sourced from biomass with medium (50–60 years) or long turnover times (100 years).
Bioenergy is part of many future low CO2 emission scenarios and it is the most important renewable energy option in studies designed to align with future RCP projections, reaching approximately 250 EJ yr−1 in RCP2.6 (ref. 1), 145 EJ yr−1 in RCP4.5 (ref. 2) and 180 EJ yr−1 in RCP8.5 (ref. 4) by the end of the twenty-first century. Integrated assessment models and policy directives have mainly focused on the quantification and mitigation of risks associated with deforestation and land-use changes10, and only recently has the default ‘carbon neutrality’ assumption applied to CO2 emissions from bioenergy come under scrutiny by governmental authorities11. In bioenergy systems, the CO2 exchanges with the atmosphere are usually characterized by fast emissions from biomass combustion and slow CO2 uptake by vegetation re-growth. As succinctly mentioned in the 5th IPCC Assessment Report12, this yields a non-zero climate forcing even if the net CO2 fluxes sum up to zero over time. The climate impact from this temporal asymmetry can be quantified at different points of the carbon–climate cause–effect chain12, from a simple sum of CO2 fluxes informing about an initial carbon debt5 to radiative forcing and subsequent temperature change13. Whereas the temperature response to a CO2 pulse from fossil fuels is sustained for many centuries at an approximately constant or slightly decreasing value6, 14, 15, 16, recent studies showed that the temperature change from bioenergy CO2 emissions is characterized by an initial warming followed by a smaller long-term cooling and asymptotically tend to zero12, 13, 17. However, an analysis that disentangles the role of CO2 emissions from bioenergy within the policy-relevant framework3, 7, 8, 18 linking temperature peak (ΔTpeak) and emissions is still missing. Many studies found that the temperature peak of long-lived greenhouse gases (GHG) is roughly proportional to cumulative emissions6, 14, 19, whereas the ΔTpeak from short-lived species is constrained by their maximum emission rate7, 8, 9, 12, 20. The reason is that the atmospheric perturbation from long-lived GHGs such as CO2 is lasting so long that the induced temperature rise will stabilize only if emissions are reduced to zero19, whereas the temperature change from short-lived species decreases after a maximum once emission rates have peaked9. Within a two-basket approach in which GHGs are differentiated into long- and short-lived8, a specific global warming target could therefore be achieved by setting a dual objective to limit cumulative emissions of long-lived GHGs and maximum emission rates of short-lived species8. Here, we show that there is a linear relationship linking the global temperature peak from bioenergy to maximum CO2 emission rates, as it is observed for short-lived climate forcers. Using the global carbon-cycle climate model OSCAR v2.1 (ref. 21), whose technical description is available in the Supplementary Information, we investigate the climate system response to CO2 emissions from bioenergy sourced from biomass resources with short (6 years), medium (55 years) and long (103 years) turnover times. The latter case study can be taken as the upper bound for the regeneration period of commercial forest plantations. Summarized in Table 1, the bioenergy experiments are based on post-harvest chronosequences of CO2 net ecosystem exchanges (NEE) that dictate the rates at which the biomass energy resources can be replenished. We treat biomass as a renewable source, with the system being carbon neutral along the biomass turnover time. Simulations are performed under a constant background climate following the protocol15 recently used by the IPCC (ref. 12) for the computation of emission metrics and temperature responses (see Methods for specific details). The direct carbon and climate responses to CO2 pulses for the cases analysed in this study are reproduced in the Supplementary Information, where the possible effects of a changing climate are also explored (Supplementary Figs 3–5).
- Vuuren, D. et al. RCP2.6: Exploring the possibility to keep global mean temperature increase below 2 °C. Climatic Change 109, 95–116 (2011).
- Thomson, A. et al. RCP4.5: A pathway for stabilization of radiative forcing by 2100. Climatic Change 109, 77–94 (2011).
- Rogelj, J. et al. Emission pathways consistent with a 2 °C global temperature limit. Nature Clim. Change 1, 413–418 (2011).
- Riahi, K. et al. RCP 8.5—A scenario of comparatively high greenhouse gas emissions. Climatic Change 109, 33–57 (2011).
- Bernier, P. & Paré, D. Using ecosystem CO2 measurements to estimate the timing and magnitude of greenhouse gas mitigation potential of forest bioenergy. GCB Bioenergy 5, 67–72 (2013).
- Matthews, H. D., Gillett, N. P., Stott, P. A. & Zickfeld, K. The proportion
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