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Greenhouse gases hit new high, maybe Asia growth
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 16 - 02 - 2007


Greenhouse gases widely blamed for
causing global warming have jumped to record highs in the
atmosphere, apparently stoked by rising emissions from Asian
industry, a researcher said on Friday, according to Reuters.
"Levels are at a new high," said Kim Holmen, research
director of the Norwegian Polar Institute which oversees the
Zeppelin measuring station on the Arctic archipelago of Svalbard
about 1,200 km (750 miles) from the North Pole.
He told Reuters that concentrations of carbon dioxide, the
main greenhouse gas emitted largely by burning fossil fuels in
power plants, factories and cars, had risen to 390 parts per
million (ppm) from 388 a year ago.
Levels have hit peaks almost every year in recent decades,
bolstering theories of warming, and are far above 270 ppm before
the Industrial Revolution of the 18th century. Climate
scientists say the heat-trapping gas is blanketing the planet.
Holmen said the increase of 2 ppm from 2006 reflected an
accelerating rise in recent years. "When I was young, scientists
were talking about 1 ppm rise" every year, he said. "Since 2000
it has been a very rapid rate."
"The large increases in release rates are definitely in the
Asian economies," led by China, he said. China is opening
coal-fired power plants at the rate of almost one a week.
Carbon dioxide concentrations peak just before the northern
hemisphere spring, when plants start soaking up the gas as they
grow. Southern hemisphere seasons have less effect since there
are fewer land masses -- and plants -- south of the equator.
The Zeppelin station is run in cooperation with Stockholm
University and is one of the main measuring points along with a
station in Hawaii. Remoteness from industrial centres helps.
Scientists say the concentration of carbon dioxide,
according to the modern records, is at its highest in the
atmosphere in at least 650,000 years.
The world's top climate scientists said in a report on Feb.
2 they were more than 90 percent certain that human activities,
led by burning fossil fuels, were to blame for warming. That was
up from 66 percent certainty in a previous report in 2001.
The U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said
that temperature rises were set to accelerate and could gain by
between 1.1 and 6.4 Celsius (2.0-11.5 Fahrenheit) by 2100,
bringing more floods, droughts and rising sea levels.
Apart from human emissions from burning fossil fuels, he
said there were other factors that could affect carbon dioxide
levels in future.
On the one hand, plants may grow more in a warmer world,
soaking up more carbon dioxide. But if the soil gets warmer,
dead plants and leaves may rot more in winter, releasing more
carbon.
Any heating of the oceans may means less absorption of
carbon dioxide, partly because the greater buoyancy of warmer
water inhibits a mixing with deeper levels.


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