The cause of global warming is showing no signs of slowing as heat-trapping carbon dioxide in Earth鈥檚 atmosphere increased to record highs in its annual Spring peak, jumping at one of the fastest rates on record, officials announced Monday.
Carbon dioxide levels in the air are now the highest they鈥檝e been in more than 4 million years because of the burning of oil coal and gas. The last time the air had similar amounts was during a less hospitable hothouse Earth before human civilization took root, scientists said.
The 好色tv Oceanic Atmospheric Administration announced that the carbon dioxide level measured . That鈥檚 3 parts per million more than last year鈥檚 May average and 51% higher than It is one of the largest annual May-to-May increases in carbon dioxide levels on record, behind only 2016 and 2019, which had jumps of 3.7 and 3.4 parts per million.
鈥淭o me as an atmospheric scientist, that trend is very concerning,鈥 said NOAA greenhouse gas monitoring group leader Arlyn Andrews. 鈥淣ot only is CO2 continuing to increase despite efforts to start reducing emissions, but it鈥檚 increasing faster than it was 10 or 20 years ago.鈥
Emissions used to increase by maybe 1 part per million per year, but now they are increasing at twice and even three times that rate, depending on whether there is an El Nino, Andrews said.
鈥淭he relentless rise in atmospheric CO2 is incredibly worrying if not wholly predictable,鈥 said Brown University climate scientist Kim Cobb, who was not part of the research.
Carbon dioxide levels are rising so that each year is higher than the last. However, there鈥檚 a seasonal cycle with carbon dioxide so that it reaches its highest saturation point in May. That鈥檚 because two-thirds of the globe鈥檚 land is in the northern hemisphere and plants suck carbon dioxide out of the air, so during late spring and summer carbon dioxide levels fall until they start rising again in November, Andrews said.
Carbon dioxide levels rise more during El Nino climate cycles because it is hotter and drier in the Tropics. An El Nino is brewing. That 3.0 increase may be a sign of an El Nino bump, she said.
There are two main ways of tracking greenhouse gases. One is to monitor what鈥檚 coming out of smokestacks and exhaust pipes, but about half of that is absorbed by the oceans and lands, Andrews said.
The other way is to measure how much carbon dioxide is in the air. NOAA and partner agencies measure all around the world. Hawaii has the longest history of direct measurements and is the home of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography鈥檚 which has kept track of carbon in the air since 1958 when the May reading peaked at 317.5. Emissions have gone up about 33% since then.
鈥淐urrent emissions are going to remain in the atmosphere for thousands of years and they鈥檙e going to continue to trap heat energy near Earth鈥檚 surface for thousands of years,鈥 Andrews said.
Because of that 鈥渨e are still dealing with CO2 in the atmosphere that was emitted in the early-to-mid 20th century,鈥 University of Oklahoma meteorology professor Jason Furtado, who wasn't part of the monitoring teams, said in an email. 鈥淭his is why we have to see emissions DROP in order to have a chance to reverse climate change. And even if/when we reverse the CO2 emissions rate, it will take some time before the climate system responds.鈥
This year NOAA had a complication in its reading.
NOAA and the Scripps Institution have two distinct monitors that have slightly different measurements. Scripps measured 423.8 parts per million and often runs a bit below NOAA. Both have been at the remote Mauna Loa volcano for decades but to the NOAA monitor and it鈥檚 been unable to use it since. NOAA established another one at Mauna Kea Volcano, 21 miles away.
Scripps got their Mauna Loa site working and put one at Mauna Kea and their data shows that Mauna Kea is an accurate substation for Mauna Loa, Andrews said.
Many activists and scientists advocate for returning to 350 parts per million levels.
鈥淐O2 now is higher than any time in the last 4 to 4.5 million years when the atmosphere was about 7 degrees Fahrenheit (3.9 degrees Celsius) warmer and sea levels were 5 to 25 meters (16 to 82 feet) higher,鈥 Andrews said.
Temperatures were higher with similar amount of carbon dioxide in the air because carbon dioxide traps heat for so long and millions of years ago the build up of carbon dioxide was much more gradual, allowing heat to build and ice to melt to raise seas, scientists said.
鈥淲e are absolutely at levels unseen in human civilization,鈥 Furtado said. 鈥淗umans are running a massive experiment on the Earth climate system via burning carbon, and the results are turning out not great for a lot of people on this planet.鈥
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