Times Herald-Record

World carbon dioxide emissions increase again

- Seth Borenstein

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – The world this year pumped 1.1% more heattrappi­ng carbon dioxide into the air than last year because of increased pollution from China and India, a team of scientists reported.

The increase was reported early Tuesday at internatio­nal climate talks, where global officials are trying to cut emissions by 43% by 2030. Instead, carbon pollution keeps rising, with 36.8 billion metric tons poured into the air in 2023, twice the annual amount of 40 years ago, according to Global Carbon Project, a group of internatio­nal scientists who produce the gold standard of emissions counting.

“It now looks inevitable we will overshoot the 1.5 (degree Celsius, 2.7 degree Fahrenheit) target of the Paris Agreement, and leaders meeting at COP28 will have to agree rapid cuts in fossil fuel emissions even to keep the 2 (degree Celsius, 3.6 degree Fahrenheit) target alive,’’ study lead author Pierre

Friedlings­tein of the University of Exeter said.

Limiting warming to 1.5 degrees is “just possible’’ but only barely and with massive emission cuts, said Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change Chairman Jim Skea.

“We are clearly not going in the right direction,” Friedlings­tein said.

This year, the burning of fossil fuel and manufactur­ing of cement have added the equivalent of putting 2.57 million pounds of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere every second.

If China and India were excluded from the count, world carbon dioxide emissions from the burning of fossil fuels and cement manufactur­ing would have dropped, Friedlings­tein said.

The world in 2023 increased its annual emissions by 398 million metric tons, but it was in three places: China, India and the skies. China’s fossil fuel emissions went up 458 million metric tons from last year, India’s went up 233 million metric tons and aviation emissions increased 145 million metric tons.

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