CO2 is trending: See the latest atmospheric concentrations data on Twitter

By Sophie Schmidt

Updated August 2020

As your national science agency, we get lots of questions each month about climate change and greenhouse gases (GHGs). Like ‘what’s the latest carbon dioxide count?’

Our researchers collect important data on greenhouse gases from our own monitoring station. That data gets published each month on our website. So, we’re well equipped to answer the question!

The data we collect includes current levels of atmospheric concentrations of GHGs like carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), methane (CH 4 ) and nitrous oxide (N 2 O). They’re used by researchers around the world, including ours, to help understand climate change and our world.

But you might not be following that page, and even if you’re not a researcher, it’s information you might like to know.

We are now publishing our CO 2 observations in an even more accessible format. It’s on Twitter and you can follow them at #CapeGrimCO2update.

Keeping watch at Cape Grim

Hold up – where does this super important CO 2 data come from? We capture the data at the Cape Grim Baseline Air Pollution Station in Tasmania. This location is bathed in some of the cleanest air in the world.

The Cape Grim station is just south of the isolated north-west tip (Woolnorth Point) of Tasmania. Amid the ‘roaring forties’, its location is as remote as it sounds.

Prevailing westerly winds frequently bring air masses that have travelled many thousands of kilometres across the Southern Ocean.

This means the ‘baseline air’ measured at Cape Grim has a composition representative of much of the Southern Hemisphere. And it’s as clean and free from recent human and terrestrial (natural) influences as anywhere on the planet.

That’s part of the reason the station is one of only three Premier Global Baseline Stations in the World Meteorological Organisation’s (WMO) Global Atmosphere Watch (GAW) program. And it’s the only one in the Southern Hemisphere. Together with Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii and Alert in the Canadian Arctic, these stations span the globe and monitor underlying global composition change.

CSIRO has been doing this at Cape Grim since 1976. Together with the Bureau of Meteorology.

Why is CO 2 trending?

This is the part we’re keen to tell you about. Global average GHG concentrations have been trending upwards since the Industrial Revolution in the mid-18th century.

From our Antarctic ice core measurements, we know CO 2 levels in the atmosphere were stable at around 278 parts per million (ppm) for millennia.

When measurements commenced at Cape Grim in 1976, CO 2 concentrations had already risen to 328 ppm. They have been accelerating ever since, increasing by 25 per cent over the past four decades to reach 410.04 ppm in July 2020.

The measured increases in CO 2 and other GHGs (such as CH 4 and N 2 O) are predominantly caused by human activities. This includes fossil fuel use, land clearing and various agricultural practices which emit GHGs.

Our future climate depends on if, when and how rapidly the world manages to reduce GHG emissions. What about those wiggles? The long-term trend of rising CO 2 concentrations tells the story of ever-increasing human GHG emissions. But you can also see gentle wiggles in the Cape Grim baseline CO 2 record, with an amplitude of about 1 ppm. Those wiggles are the natural seasonal cycle. Plants take up CO 2 through photosynthesis most strongly during the warmer, wetter parts of the year, beginning in spring and lowering the average CO 2 . After summer, when conditions tend to be drier and cooler, ecosystem respiration dominates, releasing CO 2 back into the atmosphere. So, the wiggles are a seasonal cycle, but the overall trend is relentlessly upwards. Has COVID-19 impacted on the amount of atmospheric CO 2 ? We’ve been getting lots of questions around the impact of reduced emissions during the COVID-19 shutdown. Current estimates put the annual reduction of global fossil fuel CO 2 emissions in 2020 at between 4.2% to 7.5% when compared to 2019. So yes, COVID-19 will impact the amount of CO 2 in the atmosphere. Unfortunately, this does not mean that the amount of CO 2 in the atmosphere will decrease. In fact, we expect CO 2 to continue accumulating, but at a slightly slower rate than if there had been no pandemic. Here’s the long answer For the last decade or more, atmospheric CO 2 has risen by 2-3 ppm each year. That variability in growth rate (~1 ppm/year) is due to variability in the natural carbon cycle that takes about half of all human CO 2 emissions, so they don’t end up in the atmosphere. The effect of the COVID-19 economic shutdown is expected to reduce this year’s increase by around 0.2 ppm from what it would have been in the absence of the global pandemic. But this will be very difficult to distinguish from the underlying natural variability in growth rate of ~1 ppm. The above plot shows the accelerating rise of atmospheric CO 2 in the last few decades. The step changes in CO 2 growth rate each decade (red horizontal bars) in the graph illustrate that. It is rising because of escalating demand for carbon intensive energy and transport by a growing global population, as well as land clearing across the planet. It will take a long time to understand the full impact on the baseline record at Cape Grim. Most of the emissions reductions from the shutdown were in the Northern Hemisphere and it takes many months for this air to mix into the Southern Hemisphere and appear at Cape Grim. By the time the air reaches the Cape Grim station, the impact of short-term changes due to the COVID-19 shutdowns will have been diluted considerably. As our scientists scrutinise the data, we will need to account for all natural and human-driven fluxes of CO 2 into and out of the atmosphere, draw on carbon cycle modelling and apply robust statistics to interpret the data. Breathe easy – we’re helping to tackle climate change Cape Grim CO 2 data are available from major global data archives. These data are already serving a vital purpose in climate research. They are widely cited in international assessments of climate change. And this includes reports by the World Meteorological Organization and the United Nations. We also incorporate these data into our own climate and weather models. These models equip decision-makers with tools to navigate future climate impact and adaptation.

Follow the latest updates

To track the latest CO 2 measurements, head to @CSIRO on Twitter and follow #CapeGrimCO2update. Or you can bookmark the page on our website.

We continue to publish the latest CO 2 data on our website midway through each month. This is after we’ve completed our regular analysis from our baseline monitoring station at Cape Grim. Our monthly update includes the previous month’s data as a comparison point, as well as historic carbon dioxide levels dating back to the ‘70s.

Here’s what our monthly tweet looks like. If you have any suggestions about what you’d like to see, we’re keen to hear your thoughts.