- Last Updated: 13 June 2020
Averages | NOAA MLO | Scripps MLO |
Daily CO2 | 418.32 ppm June 1, 2020
| 417.91 ppm April 9, 2020 |
Weekly CO2 | 417.43 ppm May 24-30, 2020
| 415.08 ppm May 12-18, 2019 data |
Monthly CO2 | 416.21 ppm April 2020
| 417.16 ppm May 2020 |
Yearly CO2 | 411.44 ppm 2019 | 411.49 ppm 2019 |
Marking the latest CO2 records is not an act of celebration, but of bearing witness.
The achievements are a sobering reminder of the chemical changes that we humans are collectively making to the atmosphere--changes with disruptive impacts that affect every living being in the biosphere. When a new record is reached, it is is marked here with an invitation for people to take notice, reflect on the transformation that is going in the wrong direction, and resolve to reverse these trends.
Reversing the trend is not something that any one person can achieve on their own. But individuals and groups can build on this CO2 Earth initiative by taking steps that help make the CO2 indicator for planetary health as ubiqutious as our stock market updates and weather reports. Consider sharing the CO2 Earth updates and records with people and groups that are part of your information-sharing circle.
A New Daily High Each Year
The graphic below from Teem Earth partner @NumberLens presents NOAA CO2 readings since 1999 to show the seasonal peak for daily CO2 readings at Mauna Loa. It shows that CO2 levels usually peak in April or May, a phenomena discovered by Charles David Keeling in the late 1950s and early 1960s when he began what became the world's longest-running, high preceision record of direct measurements of CO2 in background air.
*Atmospheric CO2 is higher now than at any time in the past 200,000 years of human history. In fact, studies of past CO2 levels have accumulated evidence of CO2 levels being lower than 400 ppm for the past 23 million years. That makes the CO2 records on this page the highest in human history plus a period that's a hundred times short 200,000-year time that homo sapiens have graced the earth. The higher levels of this planet-heating gas is just one part of the problem. The other is the speed of the changes, more than a hundred times pre-human times, and faster than many ecosystems can adapt to.
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