'Scary': CO2 Rates Climb Even as Emissions Stabilize

Climate scientists are sounding the alarm about a new realization: while carbon dioxide emission rates by humans have stabilized, the level of the greenhouse gas in the earth’s atmosphere has continued to rise in 2017.

According to a report in The New York Times on Monday, experts are concerned that human efforts to stop pumping carbon dioxide into the air can only go so far in the fight against climate change.

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Since scientists began studying climate change, they’ve determined that most carbon dioxide that’s produced when humans burn coal, oil and natural gas, is absorbed by the earth’s oceans and land. The rest has caused concern because it’s released into the air, warming the planet.

Countries around the world have enacted regulations to keep carbon emissions to a minimum. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released standards in 2015 limiting greenhouse gas emissions from newly-built power plants, while countries in the European Union have set goals to consume energy from renewable sources by 2020. 194 countries are currently signed on to the Paris Agreement to try to limit the increase in the global temperature.

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