Carbon dioxide accumulates as seas struggle
Carbon dioxide is being accumulated in the atmosphere at the fastest
rate since records began, as scientists warn that the oceans and forests
may have absorbed so much CO2 that their crucial function as "carbon
sinks" is now severely threatened.
T he jump in atmospheric CO2 is partly the result of rising carbon
emissions as the world burns ever-more fossil fuels, according to the
latest World Meteorological Organisation report, which finds the
concentration of carbon increased by nearly three parts per million (ppm)
to 396ppm last year.
But, crucially, preliminary data in the report indicates that the
jump could also be attributed to "reduced CO2 uptake by the Earth's
biosphere" - the first time the effectiveness of the world's great
carbon sinks has been scientifically called into question.
Scientists said they were puzzled and extremely concerned by prospect
of reduced absorption of the world's oceans and plants, which they
cannot explain and which threatens to accelerate the build-up of
heat-trapping greenhouse gases in the atmosphere if the trend continues.
"That carbon dioxide concentrations continued to surge upwards last year
is worrying news," said Prof. Dave Reay, of the University of Edinburgh.
"Of particular concern is the indication that carbon storage in the
world's forests and oceans may be faltering. So far these 'carbon sinks'
have been locking away almost half of all the carbon dioxide we emit,"
Prof. Reay added.
"If they begin to fail in the face of further warming then our
chances of avoiding dangerous climate change become very slim indeed."
The plants and the oceans each typically absorb about a quarter of
humanity's CO2 emissions every year, with the other half going into the
atmosphere, where it can remain for hundreds of years.
The last time there was a reduction in the biosphere's ability to
absorb carbon was in 1998, a year in which extensive forest fires and
dry weather killed off lots of plants, dealing a blow to the world's
carbon sink.
But Dr Oksana Tarasova, chief of the atmospheric research division at
the WMO, said this time it is much more worrying because there have been
no obvious impacts on the biosphere this year.
"This problem is very serious. It could be that the biosphere is
already at its limit, or it may be close to reaching it. Or it may be
that it just becomes less effective at absorbing carbon. But it's still
very concerning," said Dr Tarasova. The worst-case scenario in which the
carbon sink ceased to function at all would double the rate at which CO2
emissions accumulate in the atmosphere, significantly increasing the
fallout of climate change, such as storms, droughts and temperature
increases, Dr Tarasova said.
The latest WMO survey packed a second environmental punch - revealing
that the oceans are currently acidifying at a rate that is unprecedented
in the past 300 million years.
This is because they are absorbing about 4kg of carbon dioxide for
every person on the planet, the report says.
The WMO's findings intensified calls for co-ordinated global action
to limit global warming to 2C, beyond which its consequences become
increasingly devastating.
"We are running out of time. Past, present and future CO2 emissions
will have a cumulative impact on both global warming and ocean
acidification.
The law of physics are non-negotiable," said the WMO's
secretary-general Michel Jarraud. He added that, rather than rising,
fossil fuel and other emissions badly need to come down."We have the
knowledge and we have the tools for action to try to keep temperature
increases within 2C to give our planet a chance and to give our children
and grandchildren a future. Pleading ignorance can no longer be an
excuse for not acting," he said.
The total concentration of heat-trapping greenhouse gases jumped to a
record 479ppm in 2013, when methane and nitrous oxide is included.
Plants and oceans: The carbon savers A carbon sink is anything that
removes carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere and stores it, in a
process known as carbon sequestration.
- The Independent
|