Archive:000/Term:GWP: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "GWP stands for "global warming potential", and it's used to describe the relative strengths of different greenhouse gases. Each greenhouse gas has a GWP value. It could be understood as the answer to the question: "Emitting 1 ton of [this greenhouse gas] is equivalent to emitting how many tons of CO<sub>2</sub>?" See the page on greenhouse gases for tables. Also note that the use of GWP implies a standard ''timescale'', because some gases stay longer in the a...") |
m (Elie moved page Term:GWP to Archive:000/Term:GWP without leaving a redirect: Huge_refactor) |
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Latest revision as of 16:30, 26 October 2024
GWP stands for "global warming potential", and it's used to describe the relative strengths of different greenhouse gases.
Each greenhouse gas has a GWP value. It could be understood as the answer to the question: "Emitting 1 ton of [this greenhouse gas] is equivalent to emitting how many tons of CO2?"
See the page on greenhouse gases for tables.
Also note that the use of GWP implies a standard timescale, because some gases stay longer in the atmosphere than others. If you ever find that two academic sources seem to contradict themselves on the GWP of a given gas, it's probably because they each specify different timescales. The most commonly used timescale is 100 years (why)While it's probably worth considering longer-term timescales, climate change is currently close to a tipping point, so shorter-term emissions matter more right now.. This could be written unambiguously as GWP100.
With GWP taken into account, the greenhouse gas emissions of anything can be measured in CO2eq.