ERIK MARTIN WILLÈN
Author of science fiction
Friday, February 6, 2026
Global warming is speeding breakdown of major greenhouse gas, research shows - Earth - Earth Sciences - Environment
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain
Scientists at the University of
California, Irvine have discovered that climate change is causing nitrous
oxide, a potent greenhouse gas and ozone-depleting substance, to break down in
the atmosphere more quickly than previously thought, introducing significant
uncertainty into climate projections for the rest of the 21st century.
Satellite data reveal shifting lifetime
Using extended satellite
observations from NASA's Microwave Limb Sounder spanning two decades
(2004–2024), researchers from UC Irvine's Department of Earth System Science
found that N2O's atmospheric lifetime is decreasing at a rate of
1.4% per decade. This shift, which is due to climate change-driven alterations
in stratospheric circulation and temperature, is comparable in magnitude to
differences across the various emissions scenarios currently used by the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change for climate assessments.
The UC Irvine scientists shared
their findings in a paper published today in Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences.
A critical but overlooked feedback
"The change in the life cycle
of atmospheric nitrous oxide is a critical piece of the puzzle that has been
largely overlooked," said co-author Michael Prather, UC Irvine professor
of Earth system science. "While most research has focused on projecting
changing N2O emissions from human activities, we've shown that
climate change itself is altering how quickly this gas is destroyed in the
stratosphere—and this effect cannot be ignored in future climate
assessments."
According to climate
scientists, nitrous oxide is the third-most-important long-lived
greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide and methane, and it's currently the
dominant ozone-depleting substance produced by human activities. With
atmospheric concentrations reaching approximately 337 parts per billion in 2024
and increasing at about 3% per decade, understanding N2O's behavior is critical for both climate change mitigation and
stratospheric ozone protection efforts, according to Prather.
Changing sink complicates future projections
The research reveals that
projecting atmospheric N2O abundance involves not just
understanding emissions from agriculture, industry, and natural sources, but
also accounting for how climate change affects the stratospheric sink where N2O is destroyed. The stratosphere is the atmospheric layer about 10 to 50
kilometers above Earth's surface.
Key findings outlined in the paper
include the revelation that the current mean lifetime of N2O is 117 years, but that is decreasing at approximately a year and a half
per decade. The decrease in N2O lifespan is consistent with
observed changes in stratospheric circulation and temperature patterns. When
extrapolated to the year 2100, the lifetime change produces shifts in
atmospheric nitrous oxide equivalent to significant shifts in Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change greenhouse gas emissions scenarios.
The study's authors note that while
a buildup of atmospheric carbon dioxide results in warmer temperatures near
Earth's surface, CO2 cools the stratosphere, which
affects the chemical reactions that destroy N2O and produce nitrogen oxides that deplete ozone.
"This cooling, combined with
changes in atmospheric circulation patterns, is speeding up the transport of N2O to the regions where it's destroyed. It's a feedback loop that adds
another layer of complexity to climate projections," explained co-author
Calum Wilson, a UC Irvine graduate student researcher in Earth system science.
Uncertainty rivals emissions scenarios
The research demonstrates that the
uncertainty introduced by the changing N2O lifetime is comparable to the uncertainty across different Shared
Socioeconomic Pathways, the scenarios used by climate scientists to project
future greenhouse gas concentrations under different policy and development
assumptions.
For example, the scientists found
that a continuation of the observed lifetime decrease trend would reduce
projected N2O levels by an amount equivalent to shifting from a
high-emissions scenario (SSP3-7.0) to a moderate-emissions scenario (SSP1-2.6
or SSP2-4.5)—without any change in actual emissions.
According to Prather, the study's
conclusions have important implications for climate models and projections
through 2100, global warming potential calculations for N2O, ozone depletion assessments, international climate policy under the
Paris Agreement, and agricultural and industrial emissions reduction
strategies.
How nitrous oxide behaves aloft
Nitrous oxide accumulates in the
lower atmosphere from both natural sources such as soils and ocean water and
human activities including agriculture, fossil fuel combustion, and industrial
processes. It is then transported into the tropical stratosphere by global
circulation patterns, where ultraviolet radiation and chemical reactions
destroy it.
The primary sink, accounting for
90% of N2O eradication, is breakdown by sunlight in the middle
and upper stratosphere, approximately 25 to 40 kilometers above Earth's
surface. The remaining 10% is annihilated through reaction with excited oxygen
atoms.
During this process, some N2O molecules produce nitrogen oxides that catalyze ozone destruction, making
N2O the most important human-emitted ozone-depleting
substance in the current era, following the phaseout of chlorofluorocarbons
under the Montreal Protocol—the outcome of Nobel Prize-winning research conducted
by UC Irvine Professor F. Sherwood Rowland and postdoctoral researcher Mario
Molina.
Next steps for climate modelers
The study authors note that while
their observational analysis and theoretical understanding point clearly to
climate-driven changes in the N2O lifetime, comprehensive
chemistry-climate model experiments are needed to fully quantify all the
feedback mechanisms involved, particularly the complete chain of N2O to nitrogen oxides to ozone to N2O photolysis (breakdown by sunlight) to the N2O lifetime.
Also needed are further studies
into regional variations in stratospheric circulation, interactions with other
atmospheric composition changes, and refinement of projections under different
climate scenarios.
"This work highlights a gap in current Earth system models," Prather added. "Stratospheric chemistry and dynamics present uncertainties in projecting N2O that are as large as uncertainties across different emissions scenarios. We need to incorporate these effects into the models used for international climate assessments."
Provided by University of California, Irvine
by Brian Bell, University of California, Irvine
edited by Gaby Clark, reviewed by Robert Egan
Source: Global warming is speeding breakdown of major greenhouse gas, research shows

