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June 20, 2016

4 Million Years

Antarctica’s CO2 Level Tops 400 PPM for First Time in Perhaps 4 Million Years

Greenhouse gas emissions have "changed our planet to the very poles," researchers say in announcing the milestone reading.

By Bob Berwyn

The concentration of heat-trapping CO2 pollution in the atmosphere has passed the 400 parts per million (ppm) threshold in Antarctica for the first time in at least 800,000 years, and possibly as long as 4 million years, scientists reported this week.

The new measurements, reported by British and US research stations, show that every corner of the planet is being affected by the burning of fossil fuels, according to British Antarctic Survey (BAS) scientists who track environmental changes on the frozen continent.

“CO2 is rising faster than it was when we began measurements in the 1980s. We have changed our planet to the very poles,” sad British Antarctic Survey scientist Dr. David Vaughn, who reported on the readings from the  Halley VI Research Station.

Independently, researchers with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration this week also reported a similar reading from the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station.

Before humans started wide-scale burning of coal, oil and gas in the mid-1800s, the CO2 level had been steady at about 280 ppm for many millennia. Since then, the concentration has increased in lockstep with fossil-fuel combustion, at a rate of about 2.1 ppm per year. The steady increase means more and more heat is trapped near the surface of the Earth, melting ice caps, intensifying heat waves and droughts, raising sea levels and killing corals reefs.

CO2 concentrations in the Northern Hemisphere first reached the 400 ppm level in 2013, said Pieter Tans, head of NOAA’s long-term greenhouse gas monitoring program. In 2014, they stayed above the mark for three months, and last year for five months. This year, climate trackers said they increased at a record rate and they’re set to stay above that level for many decades, if not centuries, depending on future fossil-fuel combustion.

The 400 ppm benchmark is mostly symbolic, according to Ralph Keeling, who is the director of the Mauna Loa CO2 program at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, which tracks CO2 concentrations in the Northern Hemisphere. The Keeling Curve is named after his father. The difference between 399 and 400 parts per million is insignificant, but the milestone gets people’s attention and shows just how much more CO2 there is in the air compared with pre-industrial times.

Most CO2 emissions are in the Northern Hemisphere, and it takes a while for the gas to mix through the atmosphere deep into the Southern Hemisphere. That explains the lag time in reaching the 400 ppm level in Antarctica, Tans said.

“Antarctica is the clearest place to see how the global blanket of greenhouse gases is increasing,” said Tans. “If you had to pick one place on Earth with low noise and variability, it would be in Antarctica.”

Reaching the 400 ppm milestone won’t have much of a direct effect on the climate at the surface of Antarctica, but Tans said the increasing concentrations around the South Pole could delay healing of the ozone hole. That formed in the 1980s as result of emissions of gases from refrigerants, solvents and propellants. An international treaty began phasing out use of chlorofluorocarbons and other ozone-damaging refrigerants and has been reversing the ozone depletion. But increasing CO2 above Antarctica will slow the recovery, Tans said, because CO2 actually cools the highest levels of the atmosphere. Cold air in the topmost layers of the stratosphere is one of the ingredients of ozone depletion.

According to the BAS, ice cores from Antarctica show that carbon dioxide concentrations are higher today than they have been at any point in at least the last 800,000 years. Other climate records based on seafloor sediments suggest it’s been at least 4 million years since levels were this high — a time when global temperatures and sea level were much higher than today.

Scientists said the measurements underscore the urgency of acting to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

“The number 400 is just a number, but it is really telling that we really don’t have a handle on carbon emissions, and we are headed for a different world,” said Dr. Mark Serreze, director of NOAA’s National Snow and Ice Data Center. “What you see in the Antarctic is pretty much the same story of what you’re going to see globally.”

He warned that warming global temperatures caused by increasing CO2 could kick-start climate feedback loops with dangerous consequences.

“This year we’re looking at very low sea ice, a very warm Arctic. This is not a good sign for what could happen this summer and in coming summers,” Serreze said. “People are seriously talking about a massive methane release from the seafloor. It might be far-fetched but it shows there are things we don’t know about the carbon cycle. We’re getting into uncharted territory.”

CO2 is unlikely to drop back below 400 ppm in Antarctica this year, or anytime in the foreseeable future, said Dr. Anna Jones, an atmospheric chemist with the BAS. Along with measuring the annual average levels, Jones said Halley researchers recently added sensitive new monitors that can track CO2 on a daily basis, getting more information on where the gas is coming from.

That’s important because the Southern Ocean surrounding Antarctica is an important global carbon sink, meaning it absorbs large amounts of CO2 and keeps it stored on the sea bottom. Any sudden changes in the measurements could indicate a big change in the carbon cycle, she explained.

There are other reasons to track CO2 levels. The new sensitive monitors, combined with aerial detection and satellite data, will help monitor and enforce the terms of the Paris climate agreement by helping identify specific sources of the gas such as individual countries or industrial areas.

Jones said CO2 measurements at the station started in 1976 at a level of 328 ppm. Even if all CO2 emissions stopped today, the concentration would keep increasing for a few years before starting to drop.

Without major cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, Tans said CO2 levels in Antarctica will follow the same inexorable upward path as elsewhere.

“I give talks on this, and I always end with a positive note, otherwise this story is so dire that people just turn off,” he said. “I tell them we actually know what to do about this. We can actually aggressively decrease emissions, and the beautiful thing is we can actually create jobs by doing that.”

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