CO2
Continues Dangerous Rise, Hits 400.2 Parts Per Million in
Late February
(Daily
and hourly CO2 readings at the Mauna Loa Observatory from February 20
to 26. Image source: The
Keeling Curve.)
3
March, 2014
More
than two months before typical annual maximum in late May or early
June, global average CO2 levels have again breached the dangerous 400
part per million threshold.
On
February 26th, Mauna Loa’s CO2 observatory recorded three hourly
readings at or above 400 parts per million with a peak value of 400.2
ppm. The reading comes just ten months after weekly CO2 values
exceeded 400 parts per million during May of 2013, the first time in
more than 3 million years that atmospheric levels have been so high.
At
the current annual rate of increase, we can expect CO2 levels to peak
around 401.5 to 403 parts per million sometime in late May of this
year. Last year’s average annual rate of increase was 2.6 parts per
million over 2012. If 2014 were to match this, abnormally rapid,
pace, daily and hourly measures could exceed peak values of 403 parts
per million over the next two months.
A
Steepening Rise of Concentration
From
the early 1960s the pace of atmospheric CO2 increase was about 1 part
per million each year. As human population, fossil fuel consumption,
and industrialized agriculture expanded, annual rates of CO2 increase
up-ticked to about 1.5 parts per million from 1980 to 2000 and again
to slightly above 2 parts per million each year from 2000 to the
present. Due to a number of factors including an expected continued
increase in fossil fuel burning, the exhaustion of various carbon
sinks around the globe, expected changes to ocean and land based
photosynthetic life, and the release of various global carbon stores
due to amplifying feedbacks related to human-caused warming, rates of
CO2 increase are expected to be as much as 7 parts per million or
more each year by the middle of this century.
Current
Pace of Emission Without Precedent
The
current pace of emission has no corollary in the geological record.
Based on best observations, the fastest CO2 increases in the past
were during either the PETM extinction event of 55 million years ago
or the Permian Extinction, or Great Dying, of 250 million years ago.
During these periods, rapid rates of CO2 increase were observed at
about .35 parts per million each year. The current pace is now six or
seven times that seen during these dangerous geological epochs and
expected rates of CO2 increase during this century could exceed 20
times that seen in the record.
It
is worth noting that more than 32 billion tons of CO2 now go into the
atmosphere each year and that this rate of emission alone is about
160 times that of volcanic emissions the world over. Total human
carbon emissions in CO2 equivalence for all greenhouse gasses is now
over 50 billion tons, or more than 200 times global volcanic
emissions. Even an epic flood basalt on the order of that which
appeared during the Permian Extinction couldn’t match the current
pace of human emission.
The
very rapid pace of increase also drives an exceedingly rapid pace of
climate and geophysical change. Among the impacts include very
rapidly rising temperatures, potentially very rapid ice melt and
global sea level rise, potentially very rapid pace of ocean
stratification and anoxia, rapid and chaotic reordering of climate
and ecological zones, and a pace of ocean acidification that has no
corollary during any past geological age. This combination of
rapid-fire impacts presents very severe hazards to all life and
ecological systems that are likely to result in stresses never before
seen on Earth over the next century under business as usual fossil
fuel emissions.
What
Does the World Look Like at 400 Parts Per Million CO2, Long-Term?
Considering
that we are already passing the dangerous 400 ppm CO2 threshold, it
is important to think about what a world with a near constant level
of CO2 in this range looks like over the long haul. This is important
because, in the current political climate, it appears highly unlikely
that fossil fuel emissions will ever be brought into a range that
results in a potential for atmospheric CO2 decline (approaching zero
fossil fuel emissions). In addition, a number of heat-driven
amplifying feedbacks are already in place that are pushing some of
Earth’s large carbon stores to release. These include, but are not
limited to, major
Arctic carbon store releases
and major
tropical forest carbon store releases
that are now likely on the order of human CO2 emissions during the
middle of the 20th Century.
In
addition, the human and feedback methane release, human nitrous oxide
release, and other human greenhouse gas release counters all the
global cooling resulting from human aerosol release (sulfur dioxide
etc). And while the human aerosol release will eventually draw down
with the cessation of coal use (either through laissez faire
depletion or through an attempt at rational political action), these
other greenhouse gasses will remain in the atmosphere for years,
decades and centuries.
The
result of these combined factors is that the world is likely to
remain in the range of 390-405 parts per million CO2 even if rapid
mitigation were to begin today. And so it is worthwhile to think
about what such a world looks like, considering that to be our
rational, best case scenario, and not to put too much faith in the
entirely too conservative equilibrium-based scenarios posed by the
IPCC.
For
a corollary to our absolute best case, we
should therefore look to the Pliocene climate of 3.0 to 3.3 million
years ago when CO2 levels stabilized at around the current range of
390 to 405 ppm CO2.
And Pliocene during this time was 2 to 3 degrees warmer than the
1880s average. It was a climate in which sea levels were at least 15
to 75 feet higher than today (some studies show up to 110 feet
higher). And it was a climate in which the Greenland and West
Antarctica were entirely bereft of glaciers.
This
climate vision of the past if probably the absolute best we can hope
for under current systems and a very rapid mitigation. Wait just a
few more years and we push above the 405 parts per million threshold
as we begin entering a rough corollary to the Miocene climate of 15
million years ago. Wait another few decades and we get to the 500-600
part per million threshold that puts all ice on Earth at risk of melt
and sets in place conditions, according to paleoclimate, where a 4-6
C temperature increase is locked in.
Rapidly
Moving Into an Ever More Dangerous Future
(Alberta
Tar Sands. Just one major unconventional fuels project rapidly
pushing the world toward climate change game over. Image source:
Water
Defense.)
That
the current pace of change in unprecedented is probably an
understatement. Human beings and governments need to come to grips
with the ever-more-dangerous world they are creating for themselves,
their children and grandchildren. Focus should now be put on
preventing as much harm as possible. And all government action should
be aimed at that result.
There
is no greater threat presented by another nation or set of
circumstances that supersedes what we are now brazenly doing to our
environment and the Earth System as a whole. And the rate at which we
are causing the end level of damage to increase is practically
unthinkable. Each further year of inaction pushes us deeper into that
dangerous future.
Links:
The question is really simple. Is planet earth going to destroy us before we destroy it. Personally I hope the planet prevails. There is no way out of the capitalist death spiral. It's not a system that is designed with an off button. Our best hope and only hope is a deadly disease wipes out 4/5ths of the world population. Believe me, that is the best case, optimistic scenario. Most people won't understand why but they will soon enough.
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