A news article from 1912 warned that burning coal was releasing dangerous amounts of carbon dioxide into Earth's atmosphere.

The paper succinctly summed up the problem of human-caused climate change, saying that CO2 "tends to make the air a more effective blanket for the earth and to raise its temperature."

The clip has gone viral on social media.

We're still burning tons of coal, 106 years later.



During this week 106 years ago, New Zealand was talking about the future of our planet. The predictions weren't uplifting.

On August 14, 1912, a newspaper called the Rodney and Otamatea Times, Waitemata and Kaipara Gazette printed a prescient paragraph in its "science notes and news" section.

The brief note warned that the Earth's atmosphere was changing because of the way the world's economies were ramping up production of fossil fuels.

"Coal consumption affecting climate," the small headline read.

Here's what it looked like on the broadsheet:

A newspaper in New Zealand printed this on Aug 14, 1912. National Library of New Zealand/Creative Commons

It reads:

"The furnaces of the world are now burning about 2,000,000,000 tons of coal a year. When this is burned, uniting with oxygen, it adds about 7,000,000,000 tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere yearly. This tends to make the air a more effective blanket for the earth and to raise its temperature. The effect may be considerable in a few centuries."

It's a stunningly succinct explanation for how people have contributed to the warming of the Earth's atmosphere.

The Kiwis weren't the first to ink the dire notice — the same text had been published a month earlier, on July 17, 1912, in Australia's Braidwood Dispatch. Before that, a March 1912 issue of Popular Mechanics was likely the very first printing of the words.

But the idea had already been bouncing around in the collective conscience of coal-burners worldwide for decades. In fact, the New York Times traces the scientific discussion of coal's effect on our atmosphere all the way back to the 1850s.

Today, we haven't changed our ways that much.

In 2016, the world consumed more than 5.3 billion metric tons of coal.

The Earth's atmosphere now holds an unprecedented amount of CO2: the concentration has risen above 411 parts per million, the highest level in 800,000 years. The high concentration of pollution in the air is killing people at alarming rates, and the heat being trapped is fueling fires and causing seas to rise. Higher temperatures could even slow down our brains if left unchecked, some research suggests.

While the rate of coal production is slowing down in the US, we're still burning tons of other Earth-warming fuels. And coal production is on the rise in other developing countries, especially in the growing economies of India and China. (Coal use is slowing down a bit in China, but it still accounts for 60% of the country's energy mix, according to the Brookings Institution.)

This activity is leading to devastating consequences for Earth's ecosystems, and for anyone trying to breathe in polluted areas.

But we've known all that for quite a while, right?