By Charles J. Hanley
March 21, 2004
The Times-Picayune
New Orleans
Scientists look into what’s fueling surge
MAUNA LOA OBSERVATORY, HAWAII – Carbon dioxide, the gas largely blamed for
global warming, has reached record levels
in the atmosphere after growing at an accelerated pace in the past year, say scientists monitoring the sky from a 2-mile-high
station atop a Hawaiian volcano.
The reason for the faster buildup of the most important “greenhouse gas” will require further analysis, the U.S. government
experts say.
“But the big picture is that CO2 is continuing to go up,” said Russell Schnell, deputy director of the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration’s climate monitoring laboratory in Boulder, Colo., which operates the Mauna Loa Observatory on the
island of Hawaii.
Carbon dioxide, mostly form burning coal, gasoline and other fossil fuels, traps heat that otherwise would radiate into
space. Global temperatures increased by about 1 degree Fahrenheit during the 20th century, and international panel of
scientists sponsored by world governments have concluded that most of the warming probably was because of greenhouse gases.
The climatologists forecast continued temperature rises that will disrupt the climate, cause seas to rise and lead to other
unpredictable consequences – unpredictable in part because of uncertainties in computer modeling of future climate.
Before the industrial age and extensive use of fossil fuels, the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere stood at
about 280 parts per million, scientists have determined.
Average readings a the 11,141-foot Mauna Loa Observatory, where carbon dioxide density peaks each northern winter, hovered
around 379 parts per million Friday, compared with about 376 a year ago.
That year-to-year increase of about 3 parts per million is considerably higher than the average annual increase of 1.8 parts
per million during the past decade, and markedly more accelerated than the 1-part-per-million annual increase recorded a
half-century ago, when observations were first made there.
Asked to explain the stepped up rate, climatologists were cautious, saying data needed to be further evaluated. But Asia
immediately sprang to mind.
“China is taking off economically and burning a lot of fuel. India too,” said Pieter Tans, a prominent carbon-cycle expert at
NOAA’s Boulder lab.
Another leading climatologist, Ralph Keeling, developed methods for measuring carbon dioxide, noted that the rate “does
fluctuate up and down a bit” and said it was too early to reach conclusions.
But he added: “People are worried about ‘feedbacks.’ We are moving into a warmer world.”
He explained that warming itself releases carbon dioxide from the ocean and soil.
By raising the gas’s level in the atmosphere, that in turn could increase warming, in a “positive feedback,” said Keeling, of
San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projects that, if unchecked, atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations by 2100
will range from 650 to 970 parts per million. As a result, the panel estimates, average global temperature probably would
rise by 2.7 and 10.4 degrees Fahrenheit between 1990 and 2100.
The 1997 Kyoto Protocol would oblige ratifying countries to reduce carbon dioxide emissions according to set schedules, to
minimize potential global warming. The pact has not taken effect.
The United States, the world’s biggest carbon dioxide emitter, signed the agreement but did not ratify it, and the Bush
administration has since withdrawn U.S. support, calling instead for voluntary emission reductions by U.S. industry and more
scientific research into climate change.