We were duped.
Or, at least, we were given some false hope. In the three years between 2014 and 2016, global carbon emissions from the burning of fossil fuels had finally
stopped increasing and leveled out. Emissions weren't yet going down — but there was the potential that they had peaked.
Perhaps,
mused scientists, this was the fruitful beginning of humanity's collective response to alter the course of history, and in doing so, avoid the
mounting woes wrought by climate change.
But, no. With 2017 came news that emissions had
ticked up. And, critically, the newly-released
2018 Global Carbon Budget Report shows that carbon emissions bumped up yet again in 2018, and are now at their highest levels on record.
Read more...
More about
Science,
Global Warming,
Climate Change,
Carbon Emissions, and
Science