Greenhouse gas levels hit record high ‘with no sign of slowdown’
Levels of atmospheric greenhouse gases have
reached another record high, “with no sign of a slowdown, let alone a
decline”, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) has warned.
Despite pledges made under the Paris Agreement
to combat climate change, concentrations of carbon dioxide, methane and
nitrous oxide all surged by higher amounts in 2018 than average for the past
decade.
Levels of CO2 – the main gas driving global
warming – reached new highs of 407.8 parts per million (ppm) in 2018, up from
405.5ppm the previous year, a report by the UN body shows.
This concentration is now 47 per cent higher
than before the Industrial Revolution began in 1760, when CO2 levels were
around 280ppm.
“We need to translate the commitments into
action and increase the level of ambition for the sake of the future welfare
of mankind,” said WMO secretary general Petteri Taalas.
The last time Earth experienced comparable
concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was three to five million
years ago, when temperatures were 2C to 3C warmer and sea levels were 10-20
metres higher than today, Mr Taalas said.
Human activity is increasing greenhouse gas
emissions, which are driving up these gases’ concentration in the atmosphere,
where they have a warming effect on the Earth’s climate.
Since 1990, there has been a 43 per cent
increase in this warming effect by long-lived greenhouse gases, the report
said.
According to the report, CO2 contributes
towards 66 per cent of this warming effect, with methane at 17 per cent, and
nitrous oxide at six per cent.
In addition, global greenhouse gas emissions
rose again in 2018 at the fastest rate in seven years, according to a
preliminary report by the Global Carbon Project.
The resultant heating of the planet is driving
impacts such as melting glaciers and sea level rise, more extreme droughts,
heatwaves and storms, also posing a threat to food security, water supplies
and wildlife.
If our current emissions trends continue
unchecked, many researchers predict mass displacement on an unprecedented
scale.
Large swathes of North Africa and the Middle
East would likely become uninhabitable due to scorching heat and drought,
with sea level rises affecting many of the world’s most populous cities.
The WMO warned that despite agreements made
under the Paris Agreement, global emissions are not estimated to peak by
2030, let alone by the 2020 date that scientists have said is necessary to
curb dangerous climate change.
“The findings ... point us in a clear
direction – in this critical period, the world must deliver concrete,
stepped-up action on emissions,” said the UN Environment Programme’s
executive director Inger Andersen.
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