Sat. Dec 28th, 2024

Credit to World Resources Institute – Until recently, it was not possible to directly measure the atmospheric concentration of NF3, and scientists had assumed that only a small percentage of the NF3 used in industry escaped into the atmosphere.

New measurement techniques have revealed much higher atmospheric concentrations of NF3 than expected, which can be partially attributed to the fact that industrial losses of the gas had been underestimated. NF3 emissions are increasing rapidly – rates of industrial production increased 40-fold between 1992 and 2007 alone . This is particularly alarming because NF3 has a 100-year global warming potential of 17,200, meaning that it is 17,200 times more powerful than carbon dioxidein trapping atmospheric heat over a 100-year time span – much higher than most other Greenhouse Gas’s (GHGs).

NF3 is now considered a potent contributor to climate change and is therefore mandated to be included in national inventories under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The GHG Protocol closely aligns its reporting requirements with those of the UNFCCC to ensure consistency between national, corporate and product life cycle inventories.

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