MAUNA LOA OBSERVATORY, Hawaii - The readings at this 2-mile-high station
show an upward curve as the world counts down to climate talks: Global warming
gases have built up to record levels in the atmosphere, from emissions that
match scientists' worst-case scenarios.
Carbon dioxide concentrations
this fall are hovering at around 385 parts per million, on their way to a
near-certain record high above 390 in the first half of next year, at the annual
peak.
"For the past million years we've never seen 390. You have to
wonder what that's going to do," said physicist John Barnes, the observatory
director.
One leading atmospheric scientist, Stephen Schneider, sees
"coin-flip odds for serious outcomes for our planet."
Far from this
mid-Pacific government observatory, negotiators from 192 nations gather in
wintry Copenhagen, Denmark, next month to try to agree on steps to head off the
worst of the climate disruptions researchers say will result if concentrations
hit around 450 parts per million - in 30 years at the current rate. Some say the
world has already passed a danger point, at 350 ppm, and must roll
back.
Today's emissions curve is tracking the worst case among seven
emissions scenarios set out in 2001 by the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC), British climatologists reported in September.
The
U.N. expert group projects that such a path would raise global temperatures
between 2.4 and 6.4 degrees Celsius (4.3 and 11.5 degrees F) by century's end.
That would come on top of a global temperature increase of about 0.6 degrees
Celsius (1 degree Fahrenheit) in the past century, a warming trend the
authoritative IPCC says is mainly due to the buildup of carbon dioxide and other
greenhouse gases.
Such warming will shift climate patterns, cause more
extreme weather events, spread drought and floods to new areas, kill off plant
and animal species, and cause seas to rise from heat expansion and the melting
of land ice, the IPCC says.
"Changing several degrees may not seem like
much, but we're just changing things too fast," Barnes said. "So the
consequences could well be drastic."
The IPCC has urged industrialized
countries to reduce global emissions by 25 to 40 percent below 1990 levels by
2020. As of 2007, they stood only 4 percent below 1990 levels, and the rest of
the world continued pouring out more and more heat-trapping gases, chiefly from
the burning of coal, gasoline and other fossil fuels.
Through this decade
global emissions have grown by 23 percent. In 2008, almost three-quarters of the
increase came from China, researchers reported last week. Other big contributors
among developing countries were India, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, South Africa, South
Korea, Indonesia, Iran and Mexico.
Experts see no sign of a
slowdown.
It would "probably be at 390 (ppm) next year at Mauna Loa,"
said Fred T. Mackenzie, a professor emeritus of oceanography at the University
of Hawaii at Manoa. That would represent almost a 40-percent increase in
carbon-dioxide density in the atmosphere since before the industrial age and
extensive use of fossil fuels.
Schneider, a Stanford University
climatologist, said the world faces a huge risk.
"I think meters of
sea-level rise are virtually inevitable, unless we can stop this. But I'm not
such an optimist," he told journalists on a fellowship program with the
Honolulu-based East-West Center. "The main message is we're in risk management.
We do not know the science well enough to know exactly what the temperature is
at when a tipping point will occur."
This U.S. government observatory,
11,141 feet (3,396 meters) up Mauna Loa's northern flank, also measures methane
and other significant greenhouse gases. It was here on Hawaii's Big Island that
climatologist Charles David Keeling pioneered the measurement of carbon dioxide
in the atmosphere, installing his experimental manometer on the gently sloping
volcano in 1958.
He chose the site, already a U.S. Weather Service
station, because the trade winds blowing over it had some of the cleanest air on
the planet. Barnes said the CO2 measurements here, thousands of miles from major
industry, were the first to show that manmade carbon dioxide emissions were
accumulating throughout the global atmosphere.
The upward trend,
averaging 1.9 parts per million per year in the past decade, undergoes seasonal
fluctuations. In summer, during the growing season, plants absorb carbon dioxide
from the atmosphere. But in winter, the concentration of C02 rises as vegetation
and other biomass decompose.
The observatory is part of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's worldwide network for measuring
greenhouse gases. It coordinates measurements with other U.S.-run research
stations in Alaska, California, American Samoa and the South Pole. Japan and
Australia also run such networks.
The Mauna Loa researchers extend their
measurements through their "flask network" - containers sent to dozens of places
around the world each week or carried on commercial ships so people can fill
them with air and send them back to be measured for C02 and other
gases.
Barnes, watching the carbon dioxide "ppm" curve track ever upward
on Mauna Loa, while some other greenhouse gases decline, noted that long-lived
CO2 is "more and more the bigger player."
"It is going into the ocean,
and there's some plant uptake, but a whole lot of it just goes into the air and
it's going to stay there for thousands of years," he said.
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On
the Net:
NOAA Mauna Loa Observatory:
http://www.mlo.noaa.gov/