"Humans pumped 36 billion tons of the
planet-warming gas into the atmosphere in 2021, more than in any previous year.
It comes from burning oil, gas and coal.
The amount of planet-warming carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere broke a record in May, continuing its relentless
climb, scientists said Friday.
It is now 50 percent higher than the preindustrial average,
before humans began the widespread burning of oil, gas and coal in the late
19th century.
There is more carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere now than at any time in at least 4 million years, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration officials said.
The concentration of the gas reached
nearly 421 parts per million in May, the peak for the year, as power plants,
vehicles, farms and other sources around the world continued to pump huge
amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Emissions totaled 36.3 billion tons in 2021,
the highest level in history.
As the amount of carbon dioxide increases, the planet keeps
warming, with effects like increased flooding, more extreme heat, drought and
worsening wildfires that are already being experienced by millions of people
worldwide. Average global temperatures are now about 1.1 degrees Celsius, or 2
degrees Fahrenheit, higher than in preindustrial times.
Growing carbon dioxide levels are
more evidence that countries have made little progress toward the goal set in
Paris in 2015 of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. That’s the threshold
beyond which scientists say the likelihood of catastrophic effects of climate
change increases significantly.
They are “a stark reminder that we
need to take urgent, serious steps to become a more climate-ready nation,” Rick
Spinrad, the NOAA administrator, said in a statement.
Although carbon dioxide levels
dipped somewhat around 2020 during the economic slowdown caused by the
coronavirus pandemic, there was no effect on the long-term trend, Pieter Tans,
a senior scientist with NOAA’s Global Monitoring Laboratory, said in an
interview.
The rate of increase in carbon dioxide concentration “just
kept on going,” he said. “And it keeps on going for about the same pace as it
did for the past decade.”
Carbon dioxide levels vary
throughout the year, increasing as vegetation dies and decays in the fall and
winter, and decreasing in spring and summer as growing plants absorb the gas
through photosynthesis. The peak is reached every May, just before plant growth
accelerates in the Northern Hemisphere. (The North has a larger effect than the
Southern Hemisphere because there is much more land surface and vegetation in
the North.)
Dr. Tans and others at the
laboratory calculated the peak concentration this year at 420.99 parts per
million, based on data from a NOAA weather station atop the Mauna Loa volcano
in Hawaii. Observations began there in the late 1950s by a Scripps Institution
of Oceanography scientist, Charles David Keeling, and the long-term record is
known as the Keeling Curve.
Scripps’s scientists still make
observations at Mauna Loa under a program run by Dr. Keeling’s son, Ralph
Keeling. Using that independent data, which is similar to NOAA’s, they
calculated the concentration at 420.78.
Both figures are about 2 parts per million higher than last
year’s record. This peak is 140 parts per million above the average
concentration in preindustrial days, which was consistently about 280 parts per
million. Since that time, humans have pumped about 1.6 trillion tons of carbon
dioxide into the atmosphere.
To reach the Paris Agreement target
of 1.5 degrees Celsius, emissions must reach “net zero” by 2050, meaning sharp
cuts, with any remaining emissions balanced out by absorption of carbon dioxide
by the oceans and vegetation. If the world approached that target, the rate of
increase in carbon dioxide levels would slow down and the Keeling Curve would
flatten out.
If emissions were completely
eliminated, Dr. Tans said, the Keeling Curve would start to fall, as the oceans
and vegetation continued to absorb the existing carbon dioxide from the air.
The decline in atmospheric concentration would continue for hundreds of years,
although progressively more slowly, he said.
At some point an equilibrium would be
reached, he said, but carbon dioxide concentrations in both the atmosphere and
oceans would be higher than preindustrial levels and would remain that way for
thousands of years.
Over such a long time scale, sea
levels could rise significantly as polar ice melts and other changes could take
place, like the conversion of Arctic tundra to forests.
“It’s that long tail that is really
worrisome to me,” Dr. Tans said. “That has the potential to really change
climate.”"
Despite the fact that solar and wind energy is getting cheaper and cheaper, nothing changes. People have become accustomed to the good life thanks to fossil fuels and do not want to give it up. Some would lose revenue and power if they give it up. It is time to introduce taxes on air pollution.
Politicians have destroyed the demand for transit state services in Lithuania. Thanks to Lithuanian politicians, we lost cheap gas from Russia for the production of fertilizers. Thanks to Lithuanian politicians, we lost cheap oil from Russia to Mažeikiai oil refinery owned by the Polish. Therefore, now is the best time to tax the use of fossil fuels in Lithuania. The money received from such a tax can be distributed to all Lithuanian citizens equally.
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