海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Data on a warming planet: What鈥檚 at stake in global climate summit

Do we really need to be hearing so much about climate change and a 鈥淐OP26 meeting鈥? Here鈥檚 a chart-based briefing on why it matters.

By Mark Trumbull, Staff writerJacob Turcotte, Graphics editor

Climate scientists are unequivocal: Human activities, from land use patterns to the burning of fossil fuels, have been dramatically boosting the quantity of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in Earth鈥檚 atmosphere. The result is a dangerous warming of Earth鈥檚 climate, where each degree of average temperature change makes a difference.聽

Yet the pattern is far from irreversible. World leaders have widely recognized the urgent need to transition toward a decarbonized economy.

Our charts with this story highlight the challenge and point to signs of progress toward solutions, as 197 nations meet for a climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland.聽

Already the conference has yielded stepped-up 鈥渘et zero鈥 targets from many nations including India, a multilateral deal to control methane emissions, and pledges to curb deforestation and the use of coal.聽Increasingly, the global public sees climate change as a priority. And alternatives to fossil fuels are getting more affordable.

The challenge ahead remains stark. Over the past century, atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide have surged from 300 parts per million to more than 400 ppm 鈥 concentrations not seen in 800,000 years of records tracked by scientists.

While some experts have given up on the Paris Agreement goal of halting global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, Helen Mountford and colleagues at the World Resources Institute frame it a little differently.

鈥淭he only way for this goal to remain in reach,鈥 they wrote yesterday, 鈥渋s if major emitters rapidly drive down emissions in the next decade 鈥 much more than they have committed to already.鈥