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By David Adam
The Guardian UK
Tuesday 13 May 2008
Rise in chief greenhouse gas worse
than feared. Earth may be losing ability to absorb CO2, say scientists.
The concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has reached a record high,
according to the latest figures, renewing fears that climate change could begin
to slide out of control.
Scientists at the Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii say that CO2 levels in the
atmosphere now stand at 387 parts per million (ppm), up almost 40% since the
industrial revolution and the highest for at least the last 650,000 years.
The figures, published by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
on its website, also confirm that carbon dioxide, the chief greenhouse gas,
is accumulating in the atmosphere faster than expected. The annual mean growth
rate for 2007 was 2.14ppm - the fourth year in the last six to see an annual
rise greater than 2ppm. From 1970 to 2000, the concentration rose by about 1.5ppm
each year, but since 2000 the annual rise has leapt to an average 2.1ppm.
Scientists say the shift could indicate that the Earth is losing its natural
ability to soak up billions of tonnes of CO2 each year. Climate models assume
that about half our future emissions will be reabsorbed by forests and oceans,
but the new figures confirm this may be too optimistic. If more of our carbon
pollution stays in the atmosphere, it means emissions will have to be cut by
more than is currently projected to prevent dangerous levels of global warming.
Martin Parry, co-chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's working
group on impacts, said: "Despite all the talk, the situation is getting
worse. Levels of greenhouse gases continue to rise in the atmosphere and the
rate of that rise is accelerating. We are already seeing the impacts of climate
change and the scale of those impacts will also accelerate, until we decide
to do something about it."
Perched some 11,000ft up a volcano, the Mauna Loa observatory has been measuring
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere since 1958. It is regarded as producing among
the most reliable data sets because of its remote location, far from any possible
source of the gas that could confuse the sensors.
Over the decades, the Mauna Loa readings, made famous in Al Gore's documentary
An Inconvenient Truth, show the CO2 level rising and falling each year as foliage
across the northern hemisphere blooms in spring and recedes in autumn. But they
also show an upward trend as human emissions pour into the atmosphere, and each
spring, the total CO2 level creeps above the previous year's high to set a new
record.
Robin Oakley, head of Greenpeace's climate change campaign, said: "We're
now witnessing a key moment in the climate change story, and it's not good news.
The last time the atmosphere was this choked with CO2 humans were yet to evolve
as a species. To even consider building new runways and coal-fired power stations
at this juncture in history is an unpardonable folly, but Gordon Brown seems
determined to stumble forward regardless with his ill-conceived plans in the
face of the science and widespread public opposition."
A study last year suggested that the recent surge in atmospheric CO2 levels
was down to three processes: growth in the world economy, heavy use of coal
in China, and a weakening of natural "sinks", forests, seas and soils
that absorb carbon. The scientists said the increase was 35% larger than they
expected.
They said about half of the carbon surge was down to the Chinese reliance on
coal, which has forced up the carbon intensity of the overall world economy
since 2000, reversing a trend of increasing energy efficiency since the 1970s.
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