State of the Planet

News from the Columbia Climate School

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Crossing 400ppm: Welcome to the Pliocene

“Right now, we’re living in a world of a Pliocene atmosphere,” scientist Maureen Raymo of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory tells the Yale Forum on Climate Change and the Media. “But the whole rest of the climate system — the oceans are trying to catch-up, the ice sheets are waning, and everything is trying to catch up to this Pliocene atmosphere.”

CO2 levels in the atmosphere hit the 400 parts per million mark last spring, and scientists expect we will hit that level for all of the month of April and possibly into July this year. The last time CO2 levels were that high was about 3 million years ago – in the Pliocene.

http://paleo.amnh.org/artwork/knight/index.html
Mastodon, painted by Charles R. Knight / American Museum of Natural History

In a video produced by the Yale Forum, Raymo talks about her research into past climate. Nothing she sees can explain the changes in climate we are seeing now – in other words, this is not a natural phenomenon, but a man-made one. We’re recreating a Pliocene atmosphere by our burning of fossil fuels (and deforestation, and the release of other “greenhouse” gases that help trap the sun’s radiation, warming the planet).

So what? Consider the climate of the Pliocene: 2 to 3 degrees C higher than now; sea levels 25 meters higher. We’re not there yet, but as Raymo says, the “symphony” of the climate system is catching up. A couple of degrees may not seem like much; but we’re talking about averages that can make a huge difference — between snow or rain, or no rain at all, and permafrost or swampland. The difference between today and the last ice age, when mile-thick sheets of ice covered much of the northern hemisphere, is only about 5 degrees Celsius (or 9 degrees Fahrenheit).

CO2 averaged about 280 parts per million in the pre-industrial era. That we’ve reached 400 parts per million in so short a time has scientists worried.

“On some level, watching these milestones be passed is a lot like watching paint dry,” Jason Smerdon, a climate researcher at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, told Climate Central in a story published Monday. “The upward march is neither surprising nor unexpected as a direct consequence of human activities; it is only alarming in the sense that it keeps happening unabated.”

CO2 levels Credit Scripps Institution of Oceanography
CO2 levels. Graphic: Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Science for the Planet: In these short video explainers, discover how scientists and scholars across the Columbia Climate School are working to understand the effects of climate change and help solve the crisis.
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