'Either we drive the fossil fuel industry into extinction—or the human race,' said JosephNSanberg.
New data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shows that theCO² concentration at the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii reached 421.13 parts per million from May 8 to May 14—the highest in recorded history and up from 418.34 ppm one year ago and 397.38 ppm one decade ago.
"We simply do not know a planet like this," meteorologist Eric Holthaus said Monday."We are in a climate emergency."CO² concentration at Mauna Loa hit 422.04 ppm on May 14, just slightly below the agency's all-time record of 422.06 ppm observed on April 26. Researchers from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego, meanwhile, measured 421.68 ppm of CO² at Mauna Loa on May 13, which they consider the daily record as of Monday.
"The window to act on climate change is closing," American Clean Power warned recently on social media."Accelerating the transition to clean energy will help reduce emissions and secure a healthier future for all."NOAA. In 1958, the first year scientists began collecting data at Mauna Loa, it was 317.51 ppm.
Climate scientist James Hansen, who alerted congressional lawmakers to the life-threatening dangers of the climate crisis in 1988, has long called for reducing atmospheric CO² to below, and there is now a scientific consensus that the livability of the planet decreases beyond such a concentration.100 times faster"The world effectively has made no serious progress compared to what is required," Tans said earlier this month.
"CO² has a longevity of hundreds to thousands of years," he noted,"so we are really making a very long-term climate commitment."
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