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Greenhouse Gas Sources and Sinks

February 11, 2006



Home > FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Arrow What are greenhouse gases?
Arrow What is Climate Change?
Arrow Why do we need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions?
Arrow What is the government doing here in Canada to reduce emissions?
Arrow What emissions are associated with the Upstream Oil and Gas industry?
Arrow What emissions are associated with Electric Power Generation in Canada?
Arrow What emissions are associated with the Petroleum industry in Canada?
Arrow What land-use and land-use change activities generate greenhouse gas emissions or removals?
Arrow What emissions result from transportation?
Arrow What are the sources of emissions in the Waste sector?

What are greenhouse gases?

Greenhouse gases (GHGs) are gases in the atmosphere that trap energy from the sun. Naturally occurring GHGs include water vapour, ozone, carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and nitrous oxide (N2O). Without them, the Earth's average temperature would be about 33°C lower than it is, making the climate too cold to support life (Schneider, 1989). While these naturally occurring gases are what make life possible, a serious concern today is the enhanced effect on the climate system of increased levels of some of these gases in the atmosphere, due mainly to human activities.

What is Climate Change?

Climate Change is the change in climate over a time period that ranges from decades to centuries. The term refers to both natural and human-induced changes. The term "climate variability" refers to shorter term (years to decades) fluctuations in climate such as those caused by El Niño/Southern Oscillation.

Why do we need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions?

Recent data indicate that the global mean surface air temperature has increased by between 0.2 and 0.6°C since the late 19th century, while Canada's mean has increased by about 1°C (IPCC, 1996b, 2001). Some models predict that the Earth's average temperature might increase by about 0.3°C per decade over the next 100 years if this increasing trend in GHG concentrations is not altered.

A warming of this magnitude could significantly alter the Earth's climate. Storm patterns and severity might increase, a rise in sea level would displace millions of coastal residents, and regional droughts and flooding could occur. Canada's agriculture, forestry, and energy sectors could all be significantly affected.

What is the government doing here in Canada to reduce emissions?

On April 13, 2005 the Government of Canada announced the climate change plan: Moving Forward on Climate Change: A Plan for Honoring our Kyoto Commitment.

The Plan provides for Government of Canada investments in the order of $10 billion between now and 2012 to fully realize the anticipated reductions of about 270 megatonnes. It also commits the Government of Canada to annual assessments of climate change initiatives and investments. Funding will be primarily reallocated, as necessary to ensure that measures are effective and cost-efficient, and that only actions resulting in greenhouse gas reductions are being funded.

What emissions are associated with the Upstream Oil and Gas industry?

Emissions from the Upstream Industry are those associated with oil and natural gas exploration, production and transport, and include:

  • fugitive emissions during exploration, production and transport;
  • emissions from the extraction of hydrogen from natural gas (used in heavy oil upgrading);
  • combustion emissions from producer generated fuel for the exploration and extraction of oil and gas, the upgrading of oilsands, as well as the transport and distribution of natural gas (including compressor station fuel consumption).

What emissions are associated with Electric Power Generation in Canada?

The Electricity Generation sector is comprised of greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel combustion from thermal generation in Canada, whether from a utility or from industry. Only a portion of Canada's generation is responsible for greenhouse gas emissions. In 1999, about 26% of the total 558 Terawatthours (TWh) generated were from greenhouse gas emitting thermal generation sources (coal, oil, natural gas and petroleum coke). The remainder was from non-emitting sources such as hydro and nuclear, with a minor portion from biomass and wind.

What emissions are associated with the Petroleum industry in Canada?

80% of these emissions are created in the extraction and product conditioning of crude oil, heavy oil sands and natural gas, through either combustion for mining/extraction or fugitive emissions at the source of production.

What land-use and land-use change activities generate greenhouse gas emissions or removals?

Forest management activities (e.g. logging, reforestation, afforestation, deforestation), human-induced fires, and changes in the way land is used all contribute to greenhouse gas emissions and removals. Greenhouse gases are emitted to the atmosphere through the decomposition or burning of living and dead organic matter. They are absorbed by vegetation through photosynthesis and stored in biomass and in soils. Both emissions and removals of greenhouse gases are large fluxes resulting from minute processes dispersed over a vast land area. Changes in land-use practices directly alter the size and rate of these natural exchanges of greenhouse gases between the terrestrial landscape and the atmosphere, both in the present and over long time periods. Understanding and measuring the components of these natural fluxes that are due to human intervention represent unique scientific and accounting challenges.

What emissions result from transportation?

Greenhouse gas emissions are produced from the consumption of fossil fuels to move passengers, freight and bulk commodities throughout Canada. The sector may be broken into five distinct sub-categories: on-road transportation (e.g. cars, light trucks, minvans, truck freight, etc.), air, marine, rail, and off-road transporation (e.g. agricultural and construction equipment, etc.).

What are the sources of emissions in the Waste sector?

The major sources of greenhouse gas emissions in the Waste sector are solid waste disposal in landfills, wastewater handling and waste incineration. These emissions consist almost completely of methane (up to 95%). Much of the waste treated or disposed is biomass or biomass-based. The carbon dioxide emissions attributable to such wastes are not accounted for in the national inventory. In theory, there are no net emissions if the biomass is sustainable harvested. For example, biomass originating from food wastes is sustainable harvested. Carbon dioxide emitted from the decomposition of food will be consumed by next year's crop. If biomass is harvested at an unsustainable rate (for example, faster than the annual regrowth), net carbon dioxide emissions will be accounted for as a loss of biomass stocks in the Land-Use Change and Forestry sector.


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Last updated: 2006-02-11
Last reviewed: 2006-02-11