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hatrack

(59,592 posts)
Wed Jun 5, 2019, 07:03 AM Jun 2019

Rate Of CO2 Rise 2nd-Highest In 60-Year Instrumental Record; 7 Straight Yrs @ 2.2 PPM Or More

EDIT

May is the most significant month for global carbon dioxide concentrations because it is the peak value for the year, before the growth of vegetation in the northern hemisphere starts to absorb the gas from the air. The seasonal peak and fall can be seen in the Keeling curve, named after Charles Keeling, who started the observations on Mauna Loa because of its isolation in the Pacific Ocean.

This is the seventh consecutive year in which steep increases in ppm have been recorded, well above the previous average, and the fifth year since the 400ppm threshold was breached in 2014. In 2016, the highest annual jump in the series so far was recorded, from 404.1 in 2015 to 407.66 in 2016.

As recently as the 1990s, the average annual growth rate was about 1.5ppm, but in the past decade that has accelerated to 2.2ppm, and is now even higher. This brings the threshold of 450ppm closer sooner than had been anticipated. Concentrations of the gas have increased every year, reflecting our burning of fossil fuels.

Ralph Keeling of the Scripps Institute, and the son of Charles, said: “The CO2 growth rate is still very high – the increase from last May was well above the average for the past decade.” He pointed to the mild El Niño conditions experienced this year as a possible factor. Tuesday’s findings come from Mauna Loa and the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which has also made complementary independent measurements of greenhouse gas concentrations since the 1970s. NOAA’s Barrow observatory on Alaska’s North Slope showed an average of 417.4ppm over the period, but the Arctic typically has higher CO2 readings than the Mauna Loa series.

EDIT

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/jun/04/latest-data-shows-steep-rises-in-co2-for-seventh-year

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Rate Of CO2 Rise 2nd-Highest In 60-Year Instrumental Record; 7 Straight Yrs @ 2.2 PPM Or More (Original Post) hatrack Jun 2019 OP
Everybody needs to to turn something off RIGHT NOW Blues Heron Jun 2019 #1
I fear our carbon sinks are saturating NickB79 Jun 2019 #2

Blues Heron

(5,940 posts)
1. Everybody needs to to turn something off RIGHT NOW
Wed Jun 5, 2019, 07:19 AM
Jun 2019

They're building new restaurant developments these days with decorative *fires* literally burning gas all day for *no reason*

LEDs have created a "it's OK to leave the lights on all day and all night - they're LEDs" mentality. A new condo went up with outdoor *lit* stairs - every step has leds the length of it. It's always on.

The seriousness of the crisis is manifestly *not* dawning on the people that designed these idiot fashionista architecture examples.

Thanks for your efforts to educate Hatrack - keep up the good work

NickB79

(19,258 posts)
2. I fear our carbon sinks are saturating
Wed Jun 5, 2019, 05:07 PM
Jun 2019

Or worse yet, flipping to carbon sources via positive feedback loops (melting permafrost, burning forests, etc).

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