Latest Events

There are no upcoming events currently scheduled.

spacer.png, 0 kB
Climate Change & Forestry
A Glosssary of Climate Change & Forestry
You can always search for entries (regexp permitted).

Begins with Contains Exactly matches

All | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | R | S | U | V | W


C
There are 18 entries in the glossary.
Pages: 1 2 »
Term Definition
Capacity BuildingA process of constructive interaction between developed and developing countries to help developing countries build the capability and skills needed to achieve environmentally sound forms of economic development. Under current negotiations, capacity building should assist developing countries to build, develop, strengthen, enhance and improve their capabilities to achieve the objective of the Convention and their participation in the Kyoto Protocol process.
 
Carbon Capture and Storage, or CSSCapture of CO2 emitted from large point sources, compression, transportation and injection into underground geological formations for long-term storage.
 
Carbon CycleThe natural processes that govern the exchange of carbon (in the form of CO2, carbonates and organic compounds etc.) among the atmospehre, ocean and terrestrial systems. Major components include photosynthesis, respiration and decay between atmospheric and terrestrial systems (approximately 120 billion tonnes/year (gigatonnes)); thermodynamic invasion and evasion between the ocean and atmosphere, operation of the carbon pump and mixing in the deep ocean (approx. 90 billion tonnes/year). Deforestation and fossil fuel burning releases approximately 8 Gt into the atmosphere annually. The total carbon in the reservoirs is approximately 2300 Gt in land biota, soil and detritus, 600 Gt in the atmosphere and 38,000 Gt in the oceans. (Fugures from IPCC Third Assessment Report 2001.) Over still longer periods, the geological processes of outgassing, volcanism, sedimentation and weathering are also important.
 
Carbon dioxide equivalent, or CO2eqA metric that allows the contribution to radiative forcing of climate by different GHGs to be compared with forcing from CO2. The Kyoto Protocol utilizes the 100-year Global Warming Potential (as reported in the Second Assessment Report of the IPCC 1995) to assess relative contributions GHGs on a mass weighted basis.
 
Carbon Dioxide FertilizationEnhancement of plant growth or yield as a result of an increase in the atmospheric concentration of CO2.
 
Carbon Dioxide, or CO2A naturally occuring gas, it is also produced by natural process such as respiration, decay of vegetation or forest firest, and as a by-product of human activities including use of fossil fuels and biomass, as well as land-use changes and other industrial processes. It is the principal anthropogenic greenhouse gas thatt affects the earth's temperature. it is the reference gas againts which ither GHGs are indexed and therefore has a 'Global Warming Potential' (see entry) of 1. Carbon dioxide constitutes approximately 0.038 per cent of the atmosphere. The mass ratio of carbon to carbon dioxide is 12/44.
 
Carbon MarketA popular term for a trading system through which countries may buy or sell units of greenhouse gas emissions(not just carbon dioxide) in an effort to meet their national limits on emissions, either under the Kyoto Protocol or under other agreements, such as that among member states of the European Union. The term comes from the fact that carbon dioxide is the predominant greenhouse gas and other gases are measured in unit scalled ‘carbon-dioxide equivalents’.
 
Carbon SequestrationThe storage of carbon or carbon dioxide in the forests, soils, ocean, or underground in depleted oil and gas reservoirs, coal seams and saline aquifers. Examples include: the separation and storage of CO2 from flue gases or the processing of fossil fuels to produce H2; and the direct removal of CO2 from the atmosphere through land-use change, afforestation, reforestation, ocean fertilization, and agricultural practices to enhance soil carbon.
 
Carbon SinksNatural or man-made systems that absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and store them. Trees, plants and the oceans all absorb CO2 and, therefore, are carbon sinks.
 
Carbon TaxA tax placed on carbon emissions. It is similar to a BTU tax, except that the tax rate is based on the fuel’s carbon content.
 


All | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | R | S | U | V | W


Glossary V2.0