Bathinda: World Meteorological Organization (social support actThe Greenhouse Gas Bulletin published on Monday paints a grim picture on emissions and emphasizes the need for scientific discussion for climate-change negotiations at the UN climate conference COP26. Glasgow.
Claiming that the world is “the way of the road”, WMO chief Petrie Talas said, “At the current rate of increase in greenhouse gas concentrations, we will see an increase in temperature by the end of this century that is much greater than that. Paris Agreement Aim for 1.5 to 2 °C above pre-industrial levels. The WMO measured carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations in 2020 at 149 percent of pre-industrial levels, while it recorded methane levels at 262 percent and nitrous oxide levels at 123 percent, when humans began disrupting it. EarthNatural Balance in 1750.
The coronavirus-driven economic slowdown led to a temporary drop in new emissions, but had no apparent effect on atmospheric levels of greenhouse gases or their growth rates. As emissions continue, so will global temperatures. Given the long life of CO2, current temperature levels will remain for decades, even if emissions rapidly drop to near zero.
From intense heat and precipitation to sea level rise and ocean acidification, rising temperatures will be accompanied by extreme weather extremes, all of which will have far-reaching socio-economic impacts. The WMO chief said, “The last time Earth experienced a comparable concentration of CO2 was 30 to 5 million years ago, when the planet was 2-3 degrees Celsius warmer and sea levels 10 to 20 meters higher. But then 7.8 billion There were no people.”
Roughly speaking, half of today’s human-emitted CO2 remains in the atmosphere and the other half is absorbed by oceans and land ecosystems, the bulletin flagged.
Claiming that the world is “the way of the road”, WMO chief Petrie Talas said, “At the current rate of increase in greenhouse gas concentrations, we will see an increase in temperature by the end of this century that is much greater than that. Paris Agreement Aim for 1.5 to 2 °C above pre-industrial levels. The WMO measured carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations in 2020 at 149 percent of pre-industrial levels, while it recorded methane levels at 262 percent and nitrous oxide levels at 123 percent, when humans began disrupting it. EarthNatural Balance in 1750.
The coronavirus-driven economic slowdown led to a temporary drop in new emissions, but had no apparent effect on atmospheric levels of greenhouse gases or their growth rates. As emissions continue, so will global temperatures. Given the long life of CO2, current temperature levels will remain for decades, even if emissions rapidly drop to near zero.
From intense heat and precipitation to sea level rise and ocean acidification, rising temperatures will be accompanied by extreme weather extremes, all of which will have far-reaching socio-economic impacts. The WMO chief said, “The last time Earth experienced a comparable concentration of CO2 was 30 to 5 million years ago, when the planet was 2-3 degrees Celsius warmer and sea levels 10 to 20 meters higher. But then 7.8 billion There were no people.”
Roughly speaking, half of today’s human-emitted CO2 remains in the atmosphere and the other half is absorbed by oceans and land ecosystems, the bulletin flagged.
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