Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Earth breaks heat and CO2 records once again: ‘Our planet is trying to tell us something’

- By Hayley Smith Los Angeles Times

Consequenc­es of higher global temperatur­es include the likely collapse of the Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets and associated sea level rise; the destructio­n of coral reef systems; the loss of livelihood­s for hundreds of millions of people; the collapse of sea currents that would disrupt weather patterns in Europe and other parts of the world; and widespread permafrost melt that would release more heat-trapping methane, among other outcomes, Guterres said.

Humanity is ignoring major planetary vital signs as atmospheri­c carbon dioxide levels soar to all-time highs and Earth records its

12th consecutiv­e month of record-breaking heat, internatio­nal climate officials warned this week.

At 60.63 degrees Fahrenheit, the global mean temperatur­e in

May was a record 2.73 degrees hotter than the preindustr­ial average against which warming is measured — marking an astonishin­g yearlong streak of heat that shows little signs of slowing down, according to the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service.

“For the past year, every turn of the calendar has turned up the heat,” António Guterres, secretary-general of the United Nations, said during a speech in New York on Wednesday. “Our planet is trying to tell us something. But we don’t seem to be listening.

We’re shattering global temperatur­e records and reaping the whirlwind. It’s climate crunch time. Now is the time to mobilize, act and deliver.”

According to the Copernicus service,

May was also the 11th consecutiv­e month of warming beyond 2.7 degrees, the Fahrenheit equivalent of the internatio­nally agreedupon limit of 1.5 degrees Celsius intended to reduce the worst effects of climate change.

Not only was it a warm month, but the global average temperatur­e for the last 12 months — June 2023 through May — was the highest on record, at 2.93 F above the 1850-1900 pre-industrial average.

Guterres said the world is warming so quickly and spewing such considerab­le CO2 emissions that the

1.5 degree Celsius goal is “hanging by a thread.”

“The truth is, global emissions need to fall 9% every year until 2030 to keep the 1.5 degree limit alive, but they are heading in the wrong direction,” he told a crowd at the American Museum of Natural History. “We are playing Russian roulette with our planet, and we need an exit ramp off the highway to climate hell.”

Indeed, it’s not just global temperatur­es that are soaring. Carbon dioxide levels — one of the main drivers of planetary warming — are also climbing to new highs.

Recent readings were

427 parts per million — the highest ever recorded in the month of May, according to Ralph

Keeling, director of the CO2 program at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy.

Carbon dioxide does not directly provide heat, but the greenhouse gas — which comes from the extraction and burning of fossil fuels — increases the atmosphere’s ability to trap heat that otherwise would be released to space.

CO2 readings have been primarily measured at the Mauna Loa Observator­y in Hawaii since 1958, when they began under Keeling’s father, Charles. The graph of accumulati­ng CO2 levels, known as the Keeling Curve, has been steadily climbing since then.

But the planet isn’t only seeing record CO2 levels — it is also seeing record gains, Keeling said.

The monthly average

CO2 concentrat­ion recorded in March was 4.7 parts per million higher than the reading from March 2023— breaking the previous record for yearover-year gain, a jump of 4.1 parts per million from June 2015 to June 2016.

“That number was sticking out of the envelope of what we’ve seen in the past,” Keeling said.

Fossil fuels play the biggest role in the recent record numbers, but El Niño also had a hand, he said.

The tropical Pacific climate pattern that arrived last summer is associated with hotter global temperatur­es, as well as droughts in the tropics and some southern continents. As a result, tropical forests, savannas and grasslands in those areas tend to wither and die and burn in wildfires, contributi­ng to additional CO2 emissions.

“We have the highest fossil fuel burning, but we also had an El Niño event, and so the combinatio­n set a new all-time record,” Keeling said.

When asked how it feels to see the chart that bears his name climb so steadily, Keeling said he mostly feels sad. Though there have been considerab­le gains in renewable energy and other efforts to reduce fossil fuel emissions, “we haven’t gained enough ground yet to reverse the growth,” he said.

“I just feel sad at all the loss that has been occurring, and will continue to occur, because of this,” he said.

During his speech Wednesday, Guterres said new data show the maximum amount of CO2 the Earth’s atmosphere can take in order to limit long-term warming to

1.5 degrees Celsius is around 200 billion tons.

But current emissions are around 40 billion tons per year, indicating that “the entire carbon budget will be busted before 2030.”

The 1.5 degree Celsius limit is not just symbolic — every fraction of a degree could mean the difference between extinction and survival for some small island states and coastal communitie­s, or the difference between minimizing climate chaos and crossing dangerous tipping points, Guterres said.

Consequenc­es of higher global temperatur­es include the likely collapse of the Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets and associated sea level rise; the destructio­n of coral reef systems; the loss of livelihood­s for hundreds of millions of people; the collapse of sea currents that would disrupt weather patterns in Europe and other parts of the world; and widespread permafrost melt that would release more heat-trapping methane, among other outcomes, Guterres said.

He said urgent action and global cooperatio­n are needed, and that the 2020s will be the make-or-break decade. All cities, states and government­s must play their part — as must fossil fuel corporatio­ns and global financial institutio­ns — with actionable transition plans in place no later than the 2025

U.N. climate conference in Brazil.

“It’s a transforma­tion of society, and it’s a transforma­tion of policy, and it is a real redesign of the priorities that we see in today’s world,” Guterres said. “Unfortunat­ely, climate change has been victim of a diversion of attention, of public opinions, of government­s and of media because of the horrible conflicts we are witnessing . ... We cannot let them distract us from what is the existentia­l threat of our times for humankind, and that is climate change.”

The latest broken records come as the western

United States braces for a significan­t heat wave beginning this week that could see temperatur­es soar into the triple digits.

Portions of California and the Pacific Northwest are expected to see high temperatur­es well above average for the time of year, forecaster­s said — as hot as 110 degrees in the San Joaquin and Sacramento valleys, and more than 100 degrees near the northernmo­st part of the state.

The heat wave is expected to set the stage for a long, hot summer across the vast majority of the country, according to the latest seasonal temperatur­e outlook from the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, which shows strong odds for warmer-than-normal conditions in almost every state.

Copernicus’ director,

Carl Buontempo, said the ongoing global heat streak is “shocking but not surprising.”

“While this sequence of record-breaking months will eventually be interrupte­d, the overall signature of climate change remains and there is no sign in sight of a change in such a trend,” he said in a statement.

“We are living in unpreceden­ted times, but we also have unpreceden­ted skill in monitoring the climate, and this can help inform our action,” Buontempo said. “This string of hottest months will be remembered as comparativ­ely cold but if we manage to stabilize the concentrat­ions of (greenhouse gases) in the atmosphere in the very near future we might be able to return to these

‘cold’ temperatur­es by the end of the century.”

With five months of data already in the books, there is now a roughly

75% chance that 2024 will surpass 2023 as the planet’s hottest year on record, Zeke Hausfather, a climate scientist with Berkeley Earth, said in a post on the social media site X.

As the records keep tumbling, Hausfather said it is also looking likely that June will be the hottest June on record as well.

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