The Daily Telegraph

Greenhouse gases are escalating, says UN

No sign of a reduction in levels despite global commitment­s under Paris treaty on climate change

- By Emma Gatten

LEVELS of greenhouse gases that are the main contributo­r to climate change hit a new high last year, the United Nations said yesterday.

The concentrat­ion of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere exceeded the average annual increase of the past decade, according to the UN’S World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on (WMO).

The levels of both methane and nitrous oxide also hit record highs last year, a report found.

“There is no sign of a slowdown, let alone a decline, in greenhouse gas concentrat­ion in the atmosphere despite all the commitment­s under the Paris Agreement on Climate Change,” Petteri Taalas, head of the WMO, said.

The report was released in the leadup to next month’s climate summit in Madrid where member states will discuss ways of keeping global warming below 2C.

The 195 signatorie­s of the 2015 Paris pact have already agreed to work towards limiting warming to 1.5C, the level the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change says is necessary to limit the devastatin­g impact of droughts, floods and destructio­n of biodiversi­ty.

A study from the UN Environmen­t Programme shows that greenhouse gas emissions have also increased yet again in the past year. Richard Black, director of the energy and climate intelligen­ce unit, said the two reports showed “the gap between what’s needed to keep warming below 2C and what’s actually happening is the largest it’s ever been”.

Global average concentrat­ions of CO2 reached 407.8 parts per million last year, an increase from 405.5 ppm in 2017.

There has been a 43 per cent increase in the warming impact of greenhouse gases since 1990. Carbon dioxide is responsibl­e for about 80 per cent of that effect.

Methane, which contribute­s to about 17 per cent of this warming effect, comes mostly from human activities, including cattle farming and rice growing. Forest fires and fertiliser-use contribute to nitrous oxide emissions, which also increase warming.

The WMO study looked at the global levels of greenhouse gases which accumulate in the atmosphere, rather than emissions.

About 25 per cent of emissions are absorbed into the atmosphere, and CO2 stays in the ecosystem for centuries, and even longer in oceans. Levels of C02 are now 47 per cent higher than pre-industrial levels in 1750. However,

Mr Taalas said despite the US administra­tion’s withdrawal from the Paris agreement, “plenty of positive things are happening”.

The EU has committed to cutting its greenhouse gas emissions by 40 per cent by 2030 but Ursula von der Leyen, the Commission’s new president, is leading a push to raise that to 50 per cent. Yesterday, the EU was due to declare a symbolic “climate emergency” before the Madrid summit.

The UK this year became the first country in the G7 to legislate for netzero emissions by 2050.

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