San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

DATA: GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS LEVELS SOAR TO ANOTHER RECORD

Scientists say they see ‘no end in sight’ to global increase

- BY JUSTINE MCDANIEL Mcdaniel writes for The Washington Post.

Global greenhouse gas levels set a record in 2022, keeping the planet’s temperatur­es on a rising path set to blow past the world’s climate goals, the U.N. World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on said in a report Wednesday.

There is “no end in sight” for growth in greenhouse gas emissions, the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on (WMO) warned, reporting that global concentrat­ions for carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide climbed to new highs last year. The emissions of these heat-trapping gases broke records as the planet continued on a trajectory that scientists have said will probably lead to major and irreversib­le damage to ecosystems and communitie­s.

“We are seeing new, extremely high levels of the three main gases,” which drive the rising global temperatur­e and extreme weather events, WMO senior scientific officer Oksana Tarasova told The Washington Post.

The WMO’S data analyzes measuremen­ts from 150 observatio­n stations across the globe. The record greenhouse gases levels in 2022 offer another urgent metric ahead of the COP28 climate conference this month in Dubai. Last year was the planet’s fifth-hottest, according to the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service, and carbon dioxide levels and temperatur­es have continued to climb in 2023.

Carbon dioxide accounts for about two-thirds of the warming effect on the climate, making curbing emissions critical to preventing the worst effects of climate change, scientists say.

“Despite decades of warnings from the scientific community, thousands of pages of reports and dozens of climate conference­s, we are still heading in the wrong

The Fairview fire burns south of Hemet in 2022. Climate-warming emissions that scientists say make wildfires more intense hit a new high last year.

direction,” WMO Secretary General Petteri Taalas said in a statement.

The world is moving ever closer to the warming threshold of 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustr­ial levels, and the WMO warned that the planet may be close to tipping points that could have irreversib­le consequenc­es, such as the dieback of the Amazon rainforest or the destabiliz­ation of ice sheets.

The rising concentrat­ions are also pushing the world’s forests and oceans closer to a point at which they may stop absorbing the level of emissions that humans rely on them to do, Tarasova said. In Europe, for example, last summer’s drought led forests to take up less carbon dioxide, she said, and in parts of the Amazon, the stressed forest has begun emitting it back into the atmosphere.

“All those things which have been accumulate­d for centuries or millennia, if they start going away, you cannot just put them back,” Tarasova told The Post. “The melting of the glaciers, or the melting of the ice in the Arctic — you can’t put glaciers back which were accumulate­d for thousands of years.”

Last year, atmospheri­c carbon dioxide soared to 150 percent above preindustr­ial levels, the WMO said. Methane increased by 16 parts per billion (ppb) over 2021, comparable to last year’s rise, and nitrous oxide by 1.4 ppb, a jump that Tarasova called dramatic. Carbon dioxide

concentrat­ions rose by 2.2 parts per million (ppm) from 2021 to 2022. The 2022 average concentrat­ion was around 418 ppm compared with preindustr­ial levels between 270 and 280 ppm.

The last time carbon dioxide reached a comparable concentrat­ion to 2022 was 3 million to 5 million years ago, according to the WMO.

The rate of growth of carbon dioxide levels in 2022 was slightly lower than in 2021, but WMO scientists attributed that largely to short-term variations in the carbon cycle.

The report comes one day after a federal U.S. report warned that the effects of climate change in the United States are worsening, even as many government­s and communitie­s step up their response. Also Tuesday, another report found that the world is not moving quickly enough on the many transforma­tions necessary to limit the worst consequenc­es of climate change.

In 2022, the planet suffered extreme weather disasters, including catastroph­ic flooding in Pakistan, unpreceden­ted heat across Europe and devastatin­g drought in East Africa.

Scientists say Earth is now hotter than any time in the past 125,000 years. Last week, scientists said the period from November 2022 to October 2023 was the hottest ever in modern times.

 ?? STUART PALLEY FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ??
STUART PALLEY FOR THE WASHINGTON POST

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