The Guardian (USA)

CO2 in Earth's atmosphere nearing levels of 15m years ago

- Jonathan Watts Global environmen­t editor

The amount of carbon dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere is approachin­g a level not seen in 15m years and perhaps never previously experience­d by a hominoid, according to the authors of a study.

At pre-lockdown rates of increase, within five years atmospheri­c CO2 will pass 427 parts per million, which was the probable peak of the mid-Pliocene warming period 3.3m years ago, when temperatur­es were 3C to 4C hotter and sea levels were 20 metres higher than today.

But it seems we must now go much further back to see what’s ahead.

Some time around 2025, the Earth is likely to have CO2 conditions not experience­d since the Middle Miocene Climatic Optimum 15m years ago, around the time our ancestors are thought to have diverged from orangutans and become recognisab­ly hominoid.

For the paper published in the journal Nature Scientific Reports, a team of researcher­s from the University of Southampto­n constructe­d a new highresolu­tion record of atmospheri­c CO2 during the Pliocene using data derived from the boron levels in tiny fossils about the size of a pin head collected from deep ocean sediments of the

Caribbean Sea.

This confirmed trends previously observed in ice cores, but also allowed a more precise estimate of the CO2 range in that geological epoch, when levels of solar radiation were the same as today.

“A striking result we’ve found is that the warmest part of the Pliocene had between 380 and 420 parts per million CO2 in the atmosphere,” one of the coauthors Thomas Chalk, said. “This is similar to today’s value of around 415 parts per million, showing that we are already at levels that in the past were associated with temperatur­e and sealevel significan­tly higher than today.”

“Currently, our CO2 levels are rising at about 2.5 ppm per year, meaning that by 2025 we will have exceeded anything seen in the last 3.3 million years.”

The authors said the study of the past provided a guide to what is likely to happen in the future as the Earth responds to the buildup of greenhouse

 ??  ?? The level of CO2 in the atmosphere is nearing a level possibly never experience­d by a hominoid. Photograph: Dmitry Rukhlenko - Travel Photos/Alamy Stock Photo
The level of CO2 in the atmosphere is nearing a level possibly never experience­d by a hominoid. Photograph: Dmitry Rukhlenko - Travel Photos/Alamy Stock Photo

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