Fossil Fuel and Atmospheric Levels of Carbon Dioxide

Reader Contribution by Richard Hilderman and Ph.D.

The atmosphere can handle about 700 billion tons of carbon.  Atmospheric carbon dioxide levels have been increasing since the industrial revolution.  Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas which acts like a blanket in the atmosphere to trap heat (see my posting entitled Solar Activity, Greenhouse Gas Levels and Climate Change on Our Earth).  Today the atmosphere contains about 800 billion tons of carbon and it continues to rise.  How do we know that the burning of carbon-based fossil fuels like coal, oil and natural gas contribute to the atmospheric carbon overload? 

Carbon has a unique footprint which allows scientists to determine whether the burning of fossil fuel contributes to the atmospheric carbon overload.  Carbon is composed of three isotopes which are carbon-12, carbon-13 and carbon-14.  Carbon consists mainly of the carbon-12 and carbon-13. A small amount of the carbon atom is the radioactive isotope carbon-14.  In the upper atmosphere cosmic rays from the Sun react with nitrogen to create carbon-14.  Carbon-14 is unstable and over time is converted back to nitrogen.  After 60,000 years there is no carbon-14 remaining in the original sample because it has been completely converted to nitrogen.     

Fossil fuel reservoirs are composed of coal, oil or natural gas and over time these reservoirs are buried deep in the ocean floor or underground.  The carbon atoms found in both the atmosphere and initially in fossil fuel contain all three carbon isotopes (carbon-12, carbon-13 and carbon-14).  After 60,000 years fossil fuel contains only carbon-12 (all of the carbon-14 has been converted to nitrogen) but the atmosphere still maintains a healthy mixture of the three isotopes.  Since it takes millions of years to create fossil fuel, the carbon dioxide that is released into the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuel would no carbon-14.  If the burning of carbon-based fossil releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the amount of carbon-14 isotope found in atmospheric carbon dioxide should decrease over time. Measurements of the isotopic composition of atmospheric carbon dioxide do indeed demonstrate a steady decline of carbon-14.  Furthermore, fossil fuel also contains a much lower amount of carbon-13 than does the atmosphere.  Over time the amount of carbon-13 found in atmospheric carbon dioxide has decreased. 

Clearly, the atmosphere’s carbon isotopic composition is changing and this change matches the isotope fingerprint of coal, oil and natural gas.  This demonstrates that the burning of fossil fuel is partly responsible for the current atmospheric carbon overload. 

There are three broad types of human activities that contribute to the amount of greenhouse gases (carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide) in the atmosphere: carbon dioxide emissions from the burning of fossil fuels; carbon dioxide emissions from cutting and burning of forest; and, the emission of methane (from livestock and rice cultivation) and nitrous oxide (from fertilizer use).  Burning of fossil fuel accounts for 52-65 percent of the human-induced emissions while deforestation accounts for 12-25 percent and 23 percent comes from methane and nitrous oxide.   

Comments (0) Join others in the discussion!
    Online Store Logo
    Need Help? Call 1-800-234-3368