homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Climate change has not stopped for COVID-19: emissions back on track to pre-pandemic levels

Lockdowns didn't make much of a difference to our warming world

Fermin Koop
September 9, 2020 @ 11:00 pm

share Share

Global greenhouse gas emissions are back to their usual growing trend after falling at the beginning of the year when the world was largely on pause by the novel coronavirus, a new report has shown. Ultimately, the pandemic will likely have little impact on tackling climate change by the end of the year.

Credit Flickr Mark Brenan (CC BY-SA 2.0)

The United in Science report gives an update of the state of the global climate, carried out by several international organizations such as the United Nations and the World Meteorological Organization. The report highlighted the impacts of climate change, which are getting more severe across the world.

The global lockdowns led to a significant and immediate impact on greenhouse gas emissions, the report found, with daily levels in April being 17% lower compared to 2019. But the drop wasn’t maintained and emissions are back on their growing trend. The expectation for this year is a drop between 4% and 7%.

This report included data from greenhouse gas monitoring stations. The amount of CO2 measured in air samples increased from 411 parts per million (ppm) in July 2019 to 414ppm in July this year at the Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii. In Cape Grim station in Tasmania, concentrations went from 407ppm to 410ppm year to year.

“While emissions fell during the peak of the pandemic confinement measures, they have already mostly recovered to within 5 percent of the same period in 2019 and are likely to increase further,” António Guterres, secretary-general of the United Nations, said in a statement. “This report stresses that short-term lockdowns are no substitute for the sustained climate action that is needed.”

The gap between the actions to keep global warming under control and the current efforts to cut emissions is getting wider, the authors argued, claiming greenhouse gas emissions have to be urgently addressed. Exceeding those thresholds would mean more severe climate consequences all around the world.

Countries agreed in the Paris Agreement in 2015 to limit temperature growth to 2ºC, making efforts to keep the world from going beyond 1.5ºC. While this isn’t impossible, it would require a pandemic-sized carbon slowdown every year until the end of the decade, according to the report’s findings. Meanwhile, the impacts of climate change continue to accrue.

Global sea levels are rising at a much faster rate than previously recorded. The rate of increase was 4.8 millimeters per year between 2016 and 2020, an increase over the 4.1 millimeters recorded between 2011 and 2015, the report found. Sea-ice in the Artic is also declining faster, while the rising temperatures are causing droughts and heatwaves across the globe.

“This report shows that whilst many aspects of our lives have been disrupted in 2020, climate change has continued unabated,” said in a statement WMO Secretary-General, Professor Petteri Taalas. “Greenhouse gas concentrations – which are already at their highest levels in 3 million years – have continued to rise.”

share Share

Climate Change May Have Killed More Than 16,000 People in Europe This Summer

Researchers warn that preventable heat-related deaths will continue to rise with continued fossil fuel emissions.

New research shows how Trump uses "strategic victimhood" to justify his politics

How victimhood rhetoric helped Donald Trump justify a sweeping global trade war

Biggest Modern Excavation in Tower of London Unearths the Stories of the Forgotten Inhabitants

As the dig deeper under the Tower of London they are unearthing as much history as stone.

Millions Of Users Are Turning To AI Jesus For Guidance And Experts Warn It Could Be Dangerous

AI chatbots posing as Jesus raise questions about profit, theology, and manipulation.

Can Giant Airbags Make Plane Crashes Survivable? Two Engineers Think So

Two young inventors designed an AI-powered system to cocoon planes before impact.

First Food to Boost Immunity: Why Blueberries Could Be Your Baby’s Best First Bite

Blueberries have the potential to give a sweet head start to your baby’s gut and immunity.

Ice Age People Used 32 Repeating Symbols in Caves Across the World. They May Reveal the First Steps Toward Writing

These simple dots and zigzags from 40,000 years ago may have been the world’s first symbols.

NASA Found Signs That Dwarf Planet Ceres May Have Once Supported Life

In its youth, the dwarf planet Ceres may have brewed a chemical banquet beneath its icy crust.

Nudists Are Furious Over Elon Musk's Plan to Expand SpaceX Launches in Florida -- And They're Fighting Back

A legal nude beach in Florida may become the latest casualty of the space race

A Pig Kidney Transplant Saved This Man's Life — And Now the FDA Is Betting It Could Save Thousands More

A New Hampshire man no longer needs dialysis thanks to a gene-edited pig kidney.