| Meeting the environmental challenge with measurement and standards
The National Physical Laboratory (NPL)
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Dr Nigel Fox with the heart of the
TRUTHS calibration satellite |
The challenge of climate change demands unprecedented national
and international coordination and cooperation. It will need new
technologies and new solutions to old problems. It will also need
ever more accurate measures of human activity and its impact on
climate and environment, including the establishment of agreed
measurement techniques and standards. These will allow co-operative
mitigation and adaptation strategies with the credibility needed to
gain widespread support. The UK (United Kingdom) government’s
investment in the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) makes it a
valuable national and international resource for research and
development in this area, informing policy development, and
supporting regulation and monitoring.
Leading-edge measurement science and standards are vitally
important for driving the development of innovative low-carbon
technologies and providing confidence that new products will deliver
the benefits claimed and needed. Work at NPL is already making a
significant contribution in areas as diverse as; new materials for
energy efficiency in buildings and transport; fuel cells; photovoltaics;
clean coal; nuclear power; wind-turbines; low carbon technologies for
lighting. Looking ahead robust measurement and standards will also
be increasingly important for carbon pricing and validating climate
change data.
Underpinning carbon pricing
Putting a price on carbon emissions through tax or trading is widely
accepted as a cornerstone of a global strategy for mitigation of
climate change. However, in order for this policy to gain the
widespread confidence of both government and business, carbon
pricing will need to be based on a demonstrably sound, consistent
and internationally accepted framework for measurement and
monitoring of CO2 and other GHG (greenhouse gases). Without a
robust measurement framework, any carbon-pricing regime risks
losing credibility and support.
NPL has well-established expertise in emissions monitoring, and is
ideally placed to take a central role in efforts to develop agreed
international standards for assessment, measurement and verification
of CO2 emissions and sequestration. For many years, NPL has made
important contributions to the measurement of industrial emissions
ranging from the improvement of field measurement techniques to
the development of standards supporting monitoring and trading
schemes. NPL works closely with trade associations and regulators
including work to develop performance standards for the UK
Environment Agency’s MCERTS (certified monitoring) scheme, a
framework quality assurance programme enabling UK industry to
meet the requirements of EU Emissions Directives.
NPL has also developed technologies for the detection and
measurement of both bulk and the more difficult fugitive emissions. These include Differential Absorption Lidar (DIAL) which can
remotely map concentrations of compounds in the atmosphere in
3D. At present NPL is working with US (United States) Authorities to assess the use of DIAL and
other optical techniques to
improve the quantification of
fugitive emissions.
Accurate knowledge of the
efficiency of carbon
sequestration from natural
and artificial sinks is another
crucial component for any
long-term mitigation strategy.
NPL is developing techniques
and standards to ensure that
this is underpinned by fully
traceable and internationally
accepted measurements,
providing standards and
instrumentation for
improving the accuracy of
ground, air and space-based studies of these sinks.
Validating climate-change data
Although the evidence that our climate is changing is now
unequivocal, its impact, cause, and the optimal mitigation strategy are
still highly debated topics. One of the prerequisites for resolution of
this debate is high-quality climate information. Increased confidence
in this information will reduce economic risk and facilitate wider
international agreement on mitigation and adaptation policy.
Critical to this is validated and accurate data from measurements,
both on a local and global scale. Localised measurements are needed
for specific sensitivity studies and for the validation of crucial global
measurements – which can only be made from space. In many cases
such measurements are seeking to detect small changes over longtime
periods. At present, there is considerable uncertainty over the
quality and reliability of such data, with a variation from data source
to data source much greater than the accuracy claimed and certainly
much greater than the accuracy considered vital by such bodies as
the GCOS (Global Climate Observing System) committee of the
UN.
NPL is taking a leading role in the international Earth Observation
community in grappling with this issue, taking steps to provide both
technical and procedural tools to put the data on a firm footing –
working with bodies such as ESA (European Space Agency) and
CEOS (Committee on Earth Observation Satellites) within the
overarching framework of GEO (Group on Earth Observation). In
addition NPL has proposed a dedicated satellite based calibration
mission called TRUTHS, effectively a calibration laboratory in space,
offering the prospect of a factor of ten improvement in the accuracy
of key climate data. Such a mission could operate independently, or
as a component of a “international climate calibration constellation”
such a CLARREO (Climate Absolute Radiance and Refractivity
Observatory), where it would provide the reference for the solar
reflected portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.
W: www.npl.co.uk
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