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1 - What Problems Are We Trying to Solve?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 February 2023

Mark Z. Jacobson
Affiliation:
Stanford University, California

Summary

Why do we want to transition all of our energy to clean, renewable energy? Why don’t we just continue burning fossil fuels until they run out, which may be in 50 to 150 years? For three major reasons. Namely, fossil fuels today cause massive air pollution health damage, climate damage, and risks to our energy security. These three problems require immediate and drastic solutions. The longer we wait to solve these problems, the more the accumulated damage. This chapter examines each problem, in turn.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 1.1 Estimated primary contributors to net observed global warming from 1750 to 2018. Warming aerosol particles include black and brown carbon from fossil-fuel burning, biofuel burning, and open biomass burning. Cooling aerosol particle components include sulfate, nitrate, chloride, ammonium, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, non-brown organic carbon, and water. Of the gross warming (warming before cooling is subtracted out), 45.7 percent is due to carbon dioxide, 16.3 percent is due to black plus brown carbon, 12 percent is due to methane, 9 percent is due to halogens, 8.8 percent is due to ozone, 4.3 percent is due to nitrous oxide, 3 percent is due to the urban heat island effect, 0.7 percent is due to anthropogenic heat flux, and 0.23 percent is due to anthropogenic water vapor.

Source: Jacobson, 100% Clean, Renewable Energy.8

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