Josh Gabbatiss
This year will see one of the
biggest CO2 surges in more than six decades of measurements, according to the
Met Office.
Rising emissions due to the
world’s continued appetite for fossil fuels will combine with reduced
absorption of greenhouse gas by withering grasslands and forests.
Describing the prediction as
“worrying and compelling”, scientists said it was an urgent reminder that the
time to cut out carbon is now.
CO2 levels will be at a record
high once again after emissions reached unprecedented levels last year, dashing
hopes the world had finally hit “peak carbon”.
Besides fossil fuels pumping
out the harmful gas, natural weather fluctuations will exacerbate the problem
as they hamper the ability of carbon sinks to store it.
In 2019 an upward swing in
tropical Pacific Ocean temperature will make many regions warmer and
drier.
As drought sets in and plants
dry out, they will be less capable of sucking CO2 from the atmosphere, and
massive deforestation in places like the Amazon is making this problem even worse.
The new predictions were based
on monitoring at the Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii, which has registered a 30
per cent increase in the concentration of CO2 since 1958.
“Carbon sinks have saved us
from what has already happened – the future rise would have been about double
if it wasn’t for the sinks. So we are lucky they exist, to be honest,”
Professor Richard Betts of the Met Office Hadley Centre told The
Independent.
“But the sinks themselves are
affected by the climate, and that’s an important thing because it shows that as
climate change continues in the future it may affect their strength.”
If emissions continue to rise,
a major concern is that the carbon sinks currently storing carbon will cease to
function, potentially leading to uncontrollable warming and a scenario dubbed
“hothouse Earth”.
Last year Mauna Loa
observatory recorded concentrations of over 410ppm in April, marking the
highest level that had been reached in at least 800,000 years.
This year CO2 levels in the
atmosphere are likely to hit 411 parts per million (ppm).
The Met Office forecast
predicts the average increase in CO2 will be around 2.75ppm, the third largest
annual rise on record, matched only by two years in which El Nino Pacific
warming events took place.
CO2 is by far the biggest
contributor to climate change, and global efforts to prevent environmental
disaster largely focus on transitioning away from industries that pump it into
the air.
Scientists welcomed the new
data collected in Hawaii, describing it as “a call to innovate with rapid and
radical responses” to the looming crisis.
“We need to reduce emissions
from fossil fuel use, increase soil carbon sequestration to ‘lock-up’ CO2,
decelerate deforestation and land conversion, and promote less polluting more
sustainable agriculture,” said Professor Nick Ostle from Lancaster University,
who was not involved in the Met Office research.
“It’s a massive challenge but
there are real opportunities to make an impact individually and globally.”
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