News was prepared under the information support of Online Daily Newspaper on Hellenic and international Shipping "Hellenic Shipping News". |
27 Feb 2009
Exhaust from commercial ships negates the impact caused by the industry’s release of global-warming carbon dioxide into the air, a study has discovered. Scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Boulder, Colorado, said tiny particles in the fumes spewed from ship engines have a cooling effect five times greater
than the effect from the vessels’ CO2 emissions.
Particulate
pollution and carbon dioxide have opposite effects on global warming,
the study by Daniel Lack and his colleagues showed. Particles in the
atmosphere absorb radiation and heat, known as solar shading, while
atmospheric CO2 hinders radiation from escaping, causing the Earth to
warm.
Carbon dioxide from ships makes up an estimated 3 percent of
the emissions caused by humans. Along with the CO2, the vessels
discharge 2.2 million pounds of particulate matter annually and almost
30 percent of smog-forming nitrogen oxide gases, the study said.
While
some of the pollution reduces the global-warming effect, it also
contributes to premature deaths among people living along coasts, the
authors said. About 70 percent of shipping traffic takes place within
250 miles (402 kilometers) of shorelines.
“This is a significant
health concern for coastal communities,” Lack said. The researchers
analyzed exhaust from more than 200 vessels in the Gulf of Mexico and
their pollution, which is made up of sulfates and organic pollutants
such as soot.
Source: Bloomberg