Decline In Uptake Of Carbon Emissions Confirmed
10/30/2007
Lead author and Executive Director of the Global Carbon Project, CSIRO’s
Dr Pep Canadell, says the acceleration is due to three factors: global
economic growth; the world’s economy becoming more carbon intense (that is,
since 2000 more carbon is being emitted to produce each dollar of global
wealth); and a deterioration in the land and oceans’ ability to absorb
carbon from the atmosphere at the required rate.
“What we are seeing is a decrease in the planet’s ability to absorb carbon
emissions due to human activity,” Dr Canadell says.
“Fifty years ago, for every tonne of CO2 emitted, 600kg were removed by land
and ocean sinks. However, in 2006, only 550kg were removed per tonne and
that amount is falling.”
Dr Canadell says the results have major implications for the current and
future growth of atmospheric CO2.
“The majority of current emission scenarios for modelling climate through
the 21st century assume sustained decreases in the carbon intensity of the
global economy, which have not occurred since 2000,” he says.
CSIRO’s Dr Mike Raupach, a co-chair of the Global Carbon Project, says “The
carbon cycle is generating stronger-than-expected and sooner-than-expected
climate ‘forcing’ – that is, mechanisms that ’force‘ the climate to change.
In turn, climate change itself is feeding back to affect the carbon cycle,
decreasing land and ocean sinks."
Most of the co-authors of the study – including Dr Canadell and Dr Raupach –
are members of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change which was
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for 2007 earlier this month.
Dr Raupach says the research shows that the Earth is losing its restorative
capacity to absorb CO2 emissions following massive increases in emissions
over the past half century. “The longer we delay reducing emissions, the
more restorative capacity will be lost,” Dr Raupach says.
SOURCE: CSIRO, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organisation |