Aviation
A Smaller Contributor To Climate Change Than Previously Thought
Aviation has a smaller impact on climate change than previously thought but
it's also growing rapidly and its effects are more complex than other
contributors according to a new study. A team of European climate scientists
has recrunched the numbers and determined that aviation is responsible for 3.5
percent of the global warming effect that results from human activities.
Previous estimates pegged the aviation contribution at about 5 percent. The new
data takes into account some balancing factors in the ways that aircraft
pollute.
For instance, nitrogen oxides emitted in aircraft exhaust increase the
production of ozone, a major greenhouse gas, but they also destroy methane, a
big contributor to atmospheric warming. Also contrails heat and cool the planet
at the same time by trapping atmospheric heat while reflecting sunlight. The
net result is that contrails are only about half as bad as previously thought.
The scientists say that despite the findings, aviation still needs to clean up
its act and the COVID-created hiatus in aviation activity isn't going to help
much. "It's not going to make much difference in the long term," said
researcher David Lee at Manchester Metropolitan University in the U.K.
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