Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

UN: COVID-19 lockdowns slashed pollutants, not overall CO2 levels

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GENEVA – A slowdown in industrial activity linked to the coronaviru­s pandemic cut emissions of pollutants and heat-trapping greenhouse gases, but hasn’t reduced their record levels in the atmosphere, the United Nations weather agency said Monday.

The World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on pointed to a record-setting surge of carbon dioxide emissions in recent years, but warned that any reduction in levels as a result of a pandemic-related industrial slowdown will take years to materializ­e. The organizati­on also said this can best be achieved if countries are able to cut their greenhouse gas emissions to zero.

“The lockdown-related fall in emissions is just a tiny blip on the long-term graph. We need a sustained flattening of the curve,” WMO Secretary-General Petteri Taalas said Monday after releasing the latest edition of the organizati­on’s annual Greenhouse Gas Bulletin. “The COVID-19 pandemic is not a solution for climate change.”

WMO cited estimates from the Global Carbon Project indicating that daily carbon dioxide emissions could have fallen by as much as 17% worldwide during the peak of the lockdown period when people in many countries were forced to stay home. But figures for the whole year remain unclear, and WMO said preliminar­y estimates indicate a reduction in annual global emissions of between 4.2% and 7.5%.

The lockdown has cut emissions of many pollutants and greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide. But the change in CO2 concentrat­ions – the result of cumulative past and current emissions – is in fact no bigger than the normal year-to-year fluctuations in the carbon cycle and in the amount of carbon being soaked up by vegetation and oceans.

“There has been a slight plateau in the use of carbon, which is a slightly positive thing,” Taalas told a video news conference, saying removing it from the atmosphere is “a very slow process.”

WMO said carbon-dioxide levels spiked again in 2019 to what Taalas called a “record rate of increase,” rising to a concentrat­ion of 410 parts per million just four years after topping 400 parts per million.

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