| Ocean Nitrogen Only Limited Help For Climate - Study
NORWAY: May 16, 2008
OSLO - Rising amounts of nitrogen entering the oceans from human activities
are less beneficial than previously thought as a fertiliser for tiny marine
plants that help slow global warming, scientists said on Thursday.
"As much as a third of the nitrogen entering the world's oceans from the
atmosphere is man-made," according to a team of 30 scientists writing in the
journal Science.
"It's not as good a thing as some people would like it to be," said Peter
Liss, of the University of East Anglia in England which led the study with
Texas A&M University.
Fossil fuels burnt in cars, factories or power plants release nitrogen that
can be absorbed by the seas. And nitrogen-based fertilisers are often washed
off farmland and end up in the sea.
In theory, extra nitrogen acts as a fertiliser to spur growth of microscopic
plants that absorb carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas blamed for global
warming.
But the study, by researchers in Germany, Italy, China, the Netherlands,
Switzerland, Canada and Chile as well as the United States and Britain, said
there were unwanted side-effects.
And rising levels would only have a muted benefit in slowing climate change
that the UN Climate Panel says will spur more heat waves, storms and raise
sea levels.
"Extra nitrogen draws down carbon dioxide which is good news from the
climate perspective," Liss told Reuters. "The bad news is that two-thirds
(of the carbon absorbed) is offset by the production of another greenhouse
gas, nitrous oxide."
Some scientists argue that artificially pumping nitrogen into the oceans
should be eligible for credits as part of a UN plans to slow global warming
beyond 2012.
"But you couldn't get carbon credits for all of it. Two-thirds of the carbon
will be released again in the form of nitrous oxide," Liss said.
"There has been some net benefit" from nitrogen, he added. "Of the carbon
dioxide that goes into the oceans about 10 percent of that might be due, in
our calculation, to this increased nitrogen input by mankind's activities
since 1860."
And adding more nitrogen to the oceans could disrupt marine life. "It might
change the sort of species that grow, or perhaps the plants at the surface
might start shading those lower down."
"I'd be very cautious about doing more," he said.
In some coastal areas, high levels of nitrogen from fertilisers create "dead
zones" where oxygen levels are too low for fish.
-- For Reuters latest environment blogs go to: http://blogs.reuters.com/environment/
(Editing by Giles Elgood),
Story by Alister Doyle
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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