Potent Greenhouse Gas More Common in Atmosphere Than Estimated

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Oct. 23, 2008

Steve Cole 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0918 
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx 

Robert Monroe/Mario Aguilera 
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, Calif. 
858-534-3624 
scrippsnews@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 08-268

POTENT GREENHOUSE GAS MORE COMMON IN ATMOSPHERE THAN ESTIMATED

WASHINGTON -- New research indicates a powerful greenhouse gas is at 
least four times more prevalent in the atmosphere than previously 
estimated. The research, based on data from a NASA-funded measurement 
network, examined nitrogen trifluoride, which is thousands of times 
more effective at warming the atmosphere than an equal mass of carbon 
dioxide. 

Using new analytical techniques, Ray Weiss of the Scripps Institution 
of Oceanography in La Jolla, Calif., led a team of researchers in 
making the first atmospheric measurements of nitrogen trifluoride. 
The amount of the gas in the atmosphere, which could not be detected 
using previous techniques, had been estimated at less than 1,200 
metric tons in 2006. The new research shows the actual amount was 
4,200 metric tons. In 2008, about 5,400 metric tons of the gas are in 
the atmosphere, a quantity that is increasing at a rate of about 11 
percent per year. 

"Accurately measuring small amounts of nitrogen trifluoride in air has 
proven to be a very difficult experimental problem, and we are very 
pleased to have succeeded in this effort," Weiss said. The research 
will be published Oct. 31 in the American Geophysical Union's 
Geophysical Research Letters. 

Emissions of nitrogen trifluoride were thought to be so low that the 
gas was not considered a significant potential contributor to global 
warming. It was not covered by the Kyoto Protocol, the 1997 agreement 
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions signed by 182 countries. The gas 
is 17,000 times more potent as a global warming agent than a similar 
mass of carbon dioxide. It survives in the atmosphere about five 
times longer than carbon dioxide. However, current nitrogen 
trifluoride emissions contribute only about 0.15 percent of the total 
global warming effect caused by current human-produced carbon dioxide 
emissions. 

Nitrogen trifluoride is one of several gases used during the 
manufacture of liquid crystal flat-panel displays, thin-film solar 
cells and microcircuits. Many industries have used the gas in recent 
years as an alternative to perfluorocarbons, which also are potent 
greenhouse gases, because it was believed that no more than two 
percent of the nitrogen trifluoride used in these processes escaped 
into the atmosphere. 

The Scripps team analyzed air samples gathered during the past 30 
years, including samples from the NASA-funded Advanced Global 
Atmospheric Gases Experiment network of ground-based stations. The 
network was created in the 1970s in response to international 
concerns about chemicals depleting the ozone layer. It is supported 
by NASA as part of its congressional mandate to monitor 
ozone-depleting trace gases, many of which also are greenhouse gases. 
Air samples are collected at several stations around the world. The 
Scripps team analyzed samples from coastal clean-air stations in 
California and Tasmania for this research. 

The researchers found concentrations of the gas rose from about 0.02 
parts per trillion in 1978 to 0.454 parts per trillion in 2008. The 
samples also showed significantly higher concentrations of nitrogen 
trifluoride in the Northern Hemisphere than in the Southern 
Hemisphere, which the researchers said is consistent with its use 
predominantly in that hemisphere. The current observed rate of 
increase of nitrogen trifluoride in the atmosphere corresponds to 
emissions of about 16 percent of the amount of the gas produced 
globally. 

In response to the growing use of the gas and concerns that its 
emissions are not well known, scientists recently have recommended 
adding it to the list of greenhouse gases regulated by Kyoto. 

"As is often the case in studying atmospheric emissions, this study 
shows a significant disagreement between 'bottom-up' emissions 
estimates and the actual emissions as determined by measuring their 
accumulation in the atmosphere," Weiss said. 

For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov 

	
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