CO 2 emissions data from Our World in Data and the Global Carbon Project. Atmospheric CO 2 data from NOAA and ETHZ. ![]() NOAA graph, adapted from original by Dr. Emissions rose slowly to about 5 billion tons per year in the mid-20 th century before skyrocketing to more than 35 billion tons per year by the end of the century. The amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere (blue line) has increased along with human emissions (gray line) since the start of the Industrial Revolution in 1750. The annual rate of increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide over the past 60 years is about 100 times faster than previous natural increases, such as those that occurred at the end of the last ice age 11,000-17,000 years ago. Over the next half century, the annual growth rate tripled, reaching 2.4 ppm per year during the 2010s. In the 1960s, the global growth rate of atmospheric carbon dioxide was roughly 0.8± 0.1 ppm per year. The more we overshoot what natural processes can remove in a given year, the faster the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide rises. Because we put more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than natural processes can remove, the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere increases every year. Since the middle of the 20th century, annual emissions from burning fossil fuels have increased every decade, from an average of 3 billion tons of carbon (11 billion tons of carbon dioxide) a year in the 1960s to 9.5 billion tons of carbon (35 billion tons of carbon dioxide) per year in the 2010s, according to the Global Carbon Update 2021.Ĭarbon cycle experts estimate that natural “sinks”-processes that remove carbon from the atmosphere-on land and in the ocean absorbed the equivalent of about half of the carbon dioxide we emitted each year in the 2011-2020 decade. Fossil fuels like coal and oil contain carbon that plants pulled out of the atmosphere through photosynthesis over many millions of years we are returning that carbon to the atmosphere in just a few hundred. NOAA image, based on Mauna Loa monthly mean data from NOAA Global Monitoring Lab.Ĭarbon dioxide concentrations are rising mostly because of the fossil fuels that people are burning for energy. ![]() The long-term trend of rising carbon dioxide levels is driven by human activities. The seasonal cycle of highs and lows (small peaks and valleys) is driven by summertime growth and winter decay of Northern Hemisphere vegetation. This graph shows the station's monthly average carbon dioxide measurements since 1958 in parts per million (ppm). The modern record of atmospheric carbon dioxide levels began with observations recorded at Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii.
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