The Guardian (USA)

Hawaii site that measures global CO2 shuts down after Mauna Loa volcano eruption

- Oliver Milman

The world’s premier measuremen­t site for global carbon dioxide levels has been shut down because of a volcanic eruption in Hawaii, with scientists scrambling to re-establish the crucial monitoring that has been situated on the volcano since 1958.

Lava has been shooting more than 150ft into the air from Mauna Loa, the world’s largest active volcano, since Sunday night and a river of molten rock is now not only menacing the main highway on Hawaii’s big island but also the Mauna Loa Observator­y, a scientific station situated on the northern flank of the volcano.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (Noaa), which oversees the facility, said that power lines to the observator­y have been cut and an access road to the site is now inaccessib­le due to the flow of lava coming from the volcano.

Measuremen­t of the world’s CO2 levels, which has been ongoing at Mauna Loa since 1958 and has become a crucial benchmark in the escalation of the climate crisis, has been paused due to the eruption, with the observator­y’s eight-strong scientific staff unable to access its instrument­s.

A Noaa spokeswoma­n said that scientists are trying to formulate an alternativ­e plan to continue the measuremen­t of CO2, such as moving equipment to an alternativ­e site. “We hope to have everything back relatively soon; the team is evaluating that now,” she said. “The site is unique but they are working at plan B solutions now.”

Mauna Loa is one of the five volcanoes that form the island of Hawaii, the largest of the islands that make up the archipelag­o of the US state of Hawaii. The observator­y is perched at 11,135ft above sea level on the volcano, with the remote location and normally undisturbe­d, clean air considered important advantages for its work of recording the world’s seemingly inexorable rise in carbon dioxide concentrat­ions. The upward march of CO2 levels recorded at Mauna Loa is sometimes known as the Keeling curve, named after Charles Keeling, the scientist who was the first director of the site. The levels have steadily and consistent­ly climbed in recent decades. In June, Noaa announced that global concentrat­ion of CO2 had hit 421 parts per million, a 50% increase on pre-industrial times and the highest in millions of years.

Before the point where humans starting expelling huge volumes of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere through the burning of fossil fuels, CO2 levels were around 280 parts per million for almost 6,000 years of human civilizati­on. The rapid rise in the heat-trapping gas threatens the world with disastrous climate breakdown in the form of severe heatwaves, floods, droughts and wildfires.

The volcano’s eruption is its first since 1984 and while lava is moving slowly, at less than 1mph, and not immediatel­y threatenin­g any towns on the island, it is emitting pungent gases and sulfur. David Ige, Hawaii’s governor, has warned of glass fibers that form when hot lava erupts and then cools in the air, which look like long strands of hair. “Certainly we would ask those with respirator­y sensitivit­ies to take precaution­s to minimize exposure,” he said.

The lava flow is also just a few miles from the island’s main highway, Saddle Road, and parking along sections of the highway has been banned. The eruption is occurring at the same time as lava is still flowing from the nearby, smaller volcano of Kilauea, which has been erupting since last year. Ige said that it is still “completely safe” for people to visit Hawaii, as long as they avoid the isolated area of the volcanic expulsion.

 ?? Photograph: Marco Garcia/AP ?? Mauna Loa erupting in the distance, near Hilo, Hawaii. Mauna Loa.
Photograph: Marco Garcia/AP Mauna Loa erupting in the distance, near Hilo, Hawaii. Mauna Loa.
 ?? Photograph: Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy at UC San Diego ?? Carbon dioxide concentrat­ion at Mauna Loa Observator­y over one week.
Photograph: Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy at UC San Diego Carbon dioxide concentrat­ion at Mauna Loa Observator­y over one week.

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