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hatrack

(60,934 posts)
Wed Nov 13, 2024, 08:54 AM Nov 13

Global CO2 From Fossil Fuels To Set New Record In 2024 - 41 Billion Tons, Up 2% YOY, Not Including Drought, Fire Totals

Carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels in 2024 are set to blow past last year’s record levels, dashing hopes this year will see the planet-warming emissions peak. “Reducing emissions is more urgent than ever and there’s only one way to do it: massively reduce fossil emissions,” says Pierre Friedlingstein at the University of Exeter, UK.

That is according to the latest Global Carbon Budget report, a preliminary accounting of CO2 emissions to date with projections to the end of the year, produced by Friedlingstein and his colleagues. It was released at the COP29 summit now underway in Azerbaijan, where countries aim to set new financial targets to address climate change. Last year, some researchers were forecasting a peak in emissions in 2024, but the report finds human-caused CO2 emissions are set to reach a record 41.6 gigatonnes in 2024, a 2 per cent rise on 2023’s record. Almost 90 per cent of that total consists of emissions from burning fossil fuels. The rest is from changes in the land driven mostly by deforestation and wildfires.

Despite a long-term downward trend, projected emissions from land use change also increased this year, largely due to drought-driven wildfires in the tropics. Some of the increase is also down to a collapse of the carbon land sink in 2023, which usually removes about a quarter of our annual CO2 emissions from the atmosphere. This sink declined by more than 40 per cent last year and the early part of 2024 as global temperatures spiked under the influence of El Niño.

“2023 is an incredible demonstration of what can happen in a warmer world when we had peak records in global temperatures combined with El Niño droughts and fires,” says Pep Canadell at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation in Australia, a co-author of the report. “Put all these things together and last year we had almost a third less help removing atmospheric CO2 by the world’s forests than we have had over the last decade.” While this also added to emissions in 2024, the researchers expect this “land carbon sink” has mostly recovered as the warming influence of El Niño has faded. “It’s not a long-term collapse,” says Friedlingstein.

EDIT

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2455815-drought-fires-and-fossil-fuels-push-co2-emissions-to-a-record-high/

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Global CO2 From Fossil Fuels To Set New Record In 2024 - 41 Billion Tons, Up 2% YOY, Not Including Drought, Fire Totals (Original Post) hatrack Nov 13 OP
Did they factor in... 2naSalit Nov 13 #1
Not sure, but I don't think so - larger-scale natural phenomena were the thing . . hatrack Nov 13 #2
Military... 2naSalit Nov 13 #3
Sure, by our standards - but nothing compared to, say, Canadian forest fires in 2023 hatrack Nov 13 #4

hatrack

(60,934 posts)
2. Not sure, but I don't think so - larger-scale natural phenomena were the thing . .
Wed Nov 13, 2024, 10:06 AM
Nov 13

Especially El Nino impacts.

hatrack

(60,934 posts)
4. Sure, by our standards - but nothing compared to, say, Canadian forest fires in 2023
Wed Nov 13, 2024, 10:20 AM
Nov 13

Nature doesn't just bat last, it's got us way outclassed in scale.

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