As you know I've been tracking CO2 levels as well as global temperature rise and the arctic ice extent and area.
It's another month gone and time to check the CO2 emissions levels again. I pulled up the table and the global one finally had December 2015 in it. It looked high to me so I checked the long run results table and got a surprise..
These data are here .
To digress a little, we've had some pretty intense hot periods, globally, over the last few decades. Checking out the table for those I know returns a fairly predictable result. In the hot years there is a spike of CO2 either in the year of the heat or the year before.
If we go to 1988 we see a huge spike in 1987 followed by a high year in 1998 also. That huge spike in 97 is really huge as it was only the second time that CO2 levels raised more than 2ppm (2.6 in 87) over the entire record to that time.
Then we come to 1998 which, I'm sure, we all remember. You might also remember the forest fires in 97 in Indonesia and the peat burning which choked half of Asia for 4 months. 98 was the highest growth level of CO2 in one year ever recorded (2.82) and also a 100 year spike in global temperatures.
Wind forward to 2003 and you get the same thing but in a much lower value.
So, after that long winded diatribe, what is it about 2015 that got me? Well it goes like this. 2014 was the warmest year on record to that time at about .08C higher than the long term average. 2015, on the other hand, was immediately following with a warmest year on record. But it broke two records. It was the warmest year on record and also the largest jump over the long term average by 1.6C.
So why did I write this story. Because when the December figures came in, the jump I noticed was clearer in the numbers. It hit a third record in 2015. 3.01ppm CO2 increase in one year. That's a few billion tonnes of CO2 MORE than we put in the year before.
All those fancy low power light bulbs. All that solar stuff. All that biomass, all those EV cars and what do we have to show for it? We put more CO2 into the atmosphere in 2015, in one year, than we have ever put in it before... If you look at the long term trend, when Kyoto was agreed, the average rise per year, per decade, was 1.5. This year the average for the 2010's based on 5 years only is 2.3. Some progress. I'm pretty sure that when we hit the end of the 2010's that 2.3 is going to be much more like 2.5. Which will be a full 1ppm average annual increase over what we saw before Kyoto.
Just to put a nice slant on it. ALL of the UN climate models assume we will slow down and stop increasing our CO2 output. ALL of them. All the projections they make are based on the premise that we won't keep digging our own grave faster.
Tells you how accurate those predictions are going to be doesn't it. There is nothing rosy in this story. The news is all bad all the way.