Levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere reached their annual peak last month, and once again were the highest in human history.
Despite the economic collapse resulting from the coronavirus pandemic, which has led to sharp declines in carbon dioxide emissions, the amount of the greenhouse gas has continued to climb. The May monthly average was 417.2 parts per million, according to scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego.
Separately, researchers with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported a slightly lower May average of 417.1 ppm.
The readings are about half of 1% higher than the previous high, in May 2019. The year-to-year increase of about 2.5 ppm is in line with the average annual increase during the past decade. Half a century ago, the average annual increase was just 0.8 ppm.
Emissions have fallen sharply this year as first China and then many other countries shuttered factories and other businesses, and locked down cities amid the pandemic. One recent estimate suggested that, overall for 2020, emissions from human activity could drop nearly 8%, which would be the largest year-to-year decline ever recorded.
But even a drop of that magnitude is overshadowed by natural variability in carbon emissions from vegetation and soil in response to seasonal changes temperature and soil moisture, Scripps scientists said in a news release announcing the readings. They estimated that human-caused emissions would have to drop by 20% to 30% for at least six months to result in a slowing of the rate of increase of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
“People may be surprised to hear that the response to the coronavirus outbreak hasn’t done more to influence CO2 levels,” said Ralph Keeling, a geochemist who runs the Scripps Oceanography CO2 program. The project has been taking readings since 1958 at a NOAA observatory on Mauna Loa volcano in Hawaii.
“But the buildup of CO2 is a bit like trash in a landfill,” he said. “As we keep emitting, it keeps piling up.”
“What will matter much more is the trajectory we take coming out of this situation,” Keeling added.
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