Global carbon emissions from burning fossil fuels stayed flat in 2015 for the third straight year despite economic growth,Watch Hugas Online a new assessment has found. However, this pause in the growth of emissions is likely to be short-lived unless new emissions policies are accelerated, scientists say.
The report, from researchers at the University of East Anglia and the Global Carbon Project, found that the world has slowed its annual growth rate of emissions from about 2.3 percent per year prior to 2013 down to a projected 0.2 percent in 2016.
However, before you take this new information and pronounce global warming solved, two key facts are important to consider. One is that much of the slowdown is due to lower economic growth in China, according to co-author Glen Peters, a researcher at the and Environmental Research (CICERO) in Oslo.
Also, the climate doesn't respond to the rate at which emissions are rising -- what matters is that we're still emitting greenhouse gases in the first place, which is what is causing global temperatures to increase and is having a host of damaging consequences.
The report notes that the amount of carbon dioxide in the air will continue rising until emissions are reduced to zero, which no major emitter, such as the U.S., China or India, is currently on course to do. Carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere exceeded the symbolic milestone of 400 parts per million in 2016, which is the highest level in human history.
The good news in the report, Peters told Mashablein an interview, is that the pause in emissions growth provides an opportunity to take steps that would ensure that there is not another spike in carbon pollution.
“You could see it as an opportunity to sort of lock in those gains,” Peters said, noting that it's possible that China could see its carbon emissions peak several years earlier than its target date of 2030.
The report, released at the U.N. Climate Summit in Marrakech, Morocco on Monday, shows that emissions growth held below 1 percent in 2015 despite global economic growth of 3 percent.
“This is a great help for tackling climate change but it is not enough," said Corinne Le Quéré, the director of the Tyndall Center at the University of East Anglia.
"Global emissions now need to decrease rapidly, not just stop growing.”
On a country by country level, the report found that in China, to world's top emitter, carbon pollution actually decreased in 2015 by 0.7 percent, compared to a 5 percent increase the previous year.
Peters attributed this trend to a slowdown in China's economy as well as increased use of renewables like wind and solar.
The U.S. also reduced its emissions by 2.6 percent in 2015, thanks to declining coal use.
However, other countries are seeing their emissions grow as they expand access to electricity. India, for example, showed a 6.3 percent increase in carbon emissions in 2015, the report found.
Globally, countries still are not yet on track to meet the temperature targets agreed to under the Paris Climate Agreement, which obligates countries to cut emissions enough to limit global warming under 2 degrees Celsius, or 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, below preindustrial levels by 2100.
Making of a Poem: Timmy Straw on “Brezhnev” by Timmy StrawHow to watch NC State vs. Syracuse basketball without cable: Game time, streaming deals, and moreWordle today: The answer and hints for January 29How to watch 'True Detective: Night Country' — Max subscription dealsLove Songs: “You Don’t Know What Love Is” by Blair McClendonLove Songs: “Water Sign” by Addie E. CitchensAnnouncing Our SeventiethLove Songs: “You Don’t Know What Love Is” by Blair McClendonRelentlessness: A Syllabus by Colm TóibínGaddis/Markson: Two Letters by William Gaddis and David MarksonA Place for Fire by Elisa GabbertFake Biden robocall creator suspended from voice AI company ElevenLabs'Dune: Part Two' demand crashes AMC's website and appThree Favorite Lyricists by The Paris ReviewiOS 17.4 beta: 5 new features coming to your iPhoneThe people taking Trump’s secretary of state pick to court aren’t who you’d expectBig Bird is suddenly tiny and everyone online is concernedLove Songs: “Up in Hudson” by Camille JacobsonLovers sale: 30% off sex toys plus a free Womanizer vibratorRavens vs Chiefs AFC championship game livestream: Kickoff time, streaming deals, and more Watch out, Tesla: Report says Apple could build car by 2024. How to create a custom background on Google Meet One more time, y'all: There are no sharks swimming in Irma's floodwaters Tiny, wonderful dog shows off its winning smile for the camera Malcolm Gladwell and Gucci Mane's new friendship is so pure and wonderful Pixar's 'Soul' is a beautiful and sophisticated adventure: Review This festive season, post thirst traps with abandon Brie Larson discusses 'Messy Truth’ VR at Infinity Festival Beyoncé visits her childhood church to meet with Harvey survivors Don't say 2021 will be a good year. Please. Young, racial justice activist on why she fights for representation George Clooney with an elderly fan sparks hilarious Photoshop battle OnePlus has a phone that changes color, and it actually sounds useful A flock of 70 turkeys that poop on trucks has driven a small Oregon town to the brink Policeman stops traffic to rescue a tiny kitten trying to cross the road Hawaii's Kilauea volcano awakes, awesomely fountains lava into the air Everything coming to Disney+ in January 2021 New Google Doodle celebrates the Great Conjunction These are the best signs from Australia's pro Bungie responded swiftly to a hate symbol appearing in 'Destiny 2,' but questions remain
3.3397s , 10138.7421875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Hugas Online】,Steady Information Network