Carbon dioxide emissions up by 29 percent: Report
November 21st, 2009 - 2:44 pm ICT by IANSLondon, Nov 21 (IANS) Carbon dioxide emissions are up by 29 percent since 2000, far beyond the capacity of the global “sinks” to absorb such volumes, says a report.
The use of coal as a fuel has now surpassed oil and developing countries now emit more greenhouse gases than developed countries - with a quarter of their growth in emissions accounted for by increased trade with the West.
An international team of researchers under the umbrella of the Global Carbon Project reports that over the last 50 years, the average fraction of global carbon dioxide emissions that remained in the air each year was around 43 percent.
The rest was absorbed by the carbon sinks on land and in the oceans. During this time, this fraction has likely increased from 40 percent to 45 percent. The team brings evidence that the sinks are responding to climate change and variability.
Corinne Le Quere professor at the University of East Anglia (UEA) and the British Antarctic Survey, who led the study said: “The only way to control climate change is through a drastic reduction in global carbon dioxide emissions.”
“The earth’s carbon sinks are complex and there are some gaps in our understanding, particularly in our ability to link human-induced carbon dioxide emissions to atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations on a year-to-year basis,” Le Quere said.
“But, if we can reduce the uncertainty about the carbon sinks, our data could be used to verify the effectiveness of climate mitigation policies,” he concluded.
These findings were published in Nature Geoscience.
Related Stories
- World on track to warm by 6 degrees Celsius by century end - Nov 19, 2009
- Intensive land management ruins Europe's carbon sinks - Nov 28, 2009
- Ecosystems can absorb more carbon dioxide than thought earlier - Nov 11, 2009
- CO2 emissions caused by humans rise 2 percent despite global financial crisis - Nov 19, 2009
- Terrestrial ecosystems and oceans can absorb much more CO2 than expected - Nov 11, 2009
- Antarctica glacier retreat creates new CO2 store - Nov 10, 2009
- Carbon dioxide emission rate has more than tripled this decade - Nov 25, 2009
- No rise in atmospheric CO2 fraction in past 150 years - Jan 03, 2010
- Climate change mitigation strategies ignore carbon cycling processes of inland waters - Sep 02, 2009
- Glacier retreat in Antarctic opens up new carbon sink - Nov 10, 2009
Posted in Sci-Tech, |







