logo
Carbon dioxide levels usually peak in May, but 2025's reading was like no other

Carbon dioxide levels usually peak in May, but 2025's reading was like no other

Yahoo06-06-2025

An observatory high on Hawaii's Mauna Loa volcano that measures carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has reported its highest ever seasonal peak concentration of the greenhouse gas.
For the first time, the May average exceeded 430 parts per million, reported scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Mauna Loa Observatory and the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego.
"Another year, another record," said Ralph Keeling, director of the Scripps CO2 Program. "It's sad."
Carbon dioxide and other gases function like a blanket around the Earth, holding in heat and warming the atmosphere above the surface, scientists say. A broad consensus of international scientists say the rise in carbon dioxide concentrations is responsible for the globe's changing climate, helping to make natural weather events such as rainfall, drought and heat waves more extreme.
While carbon dioxide is naturally present in Earth's atmosphere, scientists say the problem is the rate at which it's increasing, driven by fossil fuel emissions. Geoscientists at the University of Utah, who participated in a 2023 study with more than 90 scientists in 16 countries, previously stated that CO2 levels in the atmosphere are higher than they've been in human history and highest in at least 14 million years.
Climate change policy: Shifting rapidly under Trump administration
Last year, the average level of carbon dioxide rose faster over the previous year than at any other point since the recordings began, Scripps reported in January. The average readings for the 12 months was 3.58 parts per million higher than the previous year's average, breaking a record set in 2016.
In both years, the climate pattern El Niño played a role, Keeling said in January. "Although this El Niño event ended early in 2024, it is often the case that El Niño events are associated with higher than normal CO2 growth extending into the northern hemisphere summer following the El Niño event."
The historic 67-year-old laboratory at elevation 11,141 feet is the global benchmark location for monitoring carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Its measurements represent the average state of the atmosphere in the northern hemisphere.
Scripps scientist Charles David Keeling, Ralph Keeling's father, began monitoring CO2 concentrations there in 1958. He was the first to realize CO2 levels peak in May in the northern hemisphere, fall during the growing season and rise again after plants die in the fall, according to Scripps. The fluctuations were presented in a record that became known as the Keeling Curve, which demonstrated carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere were increasing every year.
NOAA initiated daily measurements at Mauna Loa in 1974 and has maintained a complementary, independent measurement record ever since. A global network that includes NOAA and Scripps, forms a dataset used by climate scientists internationally. Eruptions at Mauna Loa caused an interruption to power at the observatory in 2022, NOAA said. Scientists established a temporary measurement site at Mauna Kea nearby.
Dinah Voyles Pulver, a national correspondent for USA TODAY, covers climate change, wildlife and the environment. Reach her at dpulver@usatoday.com or @dinahvp on Bluesky or X or dinahvp.77 on Signal.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Carbon dioxide levels hit new record in May Mauna Loa observation

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Canada rescinds Digital Services Tax to restart U.S. trade talks
Canada rescinds Digital Services Tax to restart U.S. trade talks

UPI

time28 minutes ago

  • UPI

Canada rescinds Digital Services Tax to restart U.S. trade talks

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney meets with U.S. President Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House on Tuesday, May 6. On Sunday, Ottawa rescinded its Digital Services Tax after Trump pulled the United States from trade negotiations with Canada while calling the levy a "blatant attack" against Washington. File Photo by Francis Chung/UPI | License Photo June 30 (UPI) -- Ottawa announced late Sunday that it was rescinding a tax on technology firms generating revenue from Canadians just hours before it was to take effect, in an effort to move forward trade negotiations with the United States. Ottawa's Department of Finance announced in a statement that because they were scrapping the Digital Services Tax, Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump have agreed to resume trade negotiations with the goal of signing a deal by July 21. "Rescinding the digital services tax will allow the negotiations of a new economic and security relationship with the United States to make vital progress and reinforce our work to create jobs and build prosperity for all Canadians," Minister of Finance and National Revenue Francois-Philippe Champagne said. Announced in 2020, the Digital Services Tax sought to ensure domestic and foreign companies profiting off Canadians online were paying taxes on that revenue. According to Ottawa, it levied a 3% tax on revenue earned from certain digital services that rely on the engagement data and content of Canadian users as well as certain sales of Canadian user data. Companies to be affected were online market place and advertising services as well as social media companies, including Google, Apple, Amazon and Meta. The tax was to take effect Monday, amid ongoing trade negotiations between Canada and the United States. However, Trump on Friday unilaterally called the talks off after being informed American technology companies would be hit with the 3% tax, which he described as "a direct and blatant attack on our Country." "Based on this egregious Tax, we are hereby terminating ALL discussions on Trade with Canada, effective immediately," Trump said on his Truth Social platform, while stating he will inform Ottawa within seven days of "the Tariff that they will be paying to do business with the United States of America." Trump has yet to comment on the latest announcement. To rescind the tax, it will require legislative approval, so in the meantime Ottawa said it will halt collection. Relations between the United States and Canada have deteriorated under the second Trump administration due to Trump's trade war. Trump has imposed a 25% tariff on all Canadian imports not subjected to the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement, as well as a 10% tariff on energy products, a 25% tariff on all cars and trucks built north of the border and a 50% tariff on aluminum and steel imports. Canada has responded with a slew of tariffs of its own, including a 25% levy on certain goods from the United States. Prime Minister Mark Carney, whose Liberal Party won a minority government in Parliament in late April, campaigned on standing up against Trump, while referring to the Ottawa-Washington relationship as having been changed and the U.S. tariffs as a "betrayal." Amid the tariff fight, Carney has sought to strengthen other relationships while lessening Canada's trade and security dependence on the United States. Earlier this month, Canada and the European Union agreed to deepen their security and defense relationship as they launch negotiations across multiple areas, from digital policy to climate.

Dollar droops as optimism over U.S. trade deals boost Fed easing bets
Dollar droops as optimism over U.S. trade deals boost Fed easing bets

CNBC

time28 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Dollar droops as optimism over U.S. trade deals boost Fed easing bets

The dollar wallowed near its lowest in nearly four years against the euro on Monday as market optimism over U.S. trade deals bolstered bets for earlier Federal Reserve interest rate cuts. The greenback also languished near a four-year low versus sterling and a more than decade trough to the Swiss franc after Washington and China moved closer to a tariff agreement, even as U.S. President Donald Trump injected some uncertainty into the market's bullish narrative by abruptly cutting off trade talks with Ottawa. Investors interpreted Fed Chair Jerome Powell's testimony to U.S. Congress last week as dovish, after he said that rate cuts were likely if inflation does not spike this summer due to tariffs. Bets for at least one quarter-point reduction by September have risen to 92.4% according to CME Group's FedWatch Tool, from about 70% a week earlier. The Fed's rate-setting committee also meets next month, but does not gather in August. "The market pricing implies a cut as a slam dunk" in September, Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone, wrote in a client note. Friday's monthly U.S. payrolls report is "the marquee risk event" this week, Weston said, and the risk to the dollar "seems asymmetric given the Fed's reaction function is biased towards the timing of the next cut." That means the dollar is more likely to suffer a rout on weak numbers than rally on a hot outcome, he said. An additional weight on the dollar came from Trump's continued assault on Powell, saying on Friday that he would "love" if the Fed chief resigned before his term ends in May. Trump also said he wants to cut the benchmark rate to 1% from the current 4.25% to 4.5%, and reiterated that he plans to replace Powell with a more dovish chairperson. Investors are also keeping an eye on Trump's massive tax-cut and spending bill, which is currently before the Senate and could add $3.3 trillion to the national debt over a decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The dollar index which measures the U.S. currency against six major counterparts, including the euro, sterling and franc - edged up 0.1% to 97.276, but was still not far from the more than three-year low of 96.933 late last week. The euro was slightly weaker at $1.1716, just off the highest level since September 2021 reached on Friday at $1.1754. Sterling was little changed at $1.3709, hovering close to Thursday's peak of $1.37701, a level not previously seen since October 2021. The dollar was steady at 0.7988 Swiss franc, after dipping to 0.7955 franc on Friday for the first time since January 2015, when the Swiss National Bank unexpectedly removed a cap on the currency's value against the euro. The U.S. currency was flat at 144.58 yen. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Friday that Washington and Beijing had resolved issues surrounding shipments of Chinese rare earth minerals and magnets to the United States, further modifying a deal reached in May in Geneva. He also said various trade deals with other countries could be done by the U.S. Labor Day holiday on September 1, suggesting some wiggle room on Trump's July 9 deadline to reach deals or face aggressive "reciprocal" tariffs. "USD will be driven by U.S. trade developments this week in our view," Commonwealth Bank of Australia analysts wrote in their weekly FX strategy report. "We are skeptical so many trade deals can be agreed so quickly," they said. "Nonetheless, news that some trade deals have been agreed will support the USD against the major currencies - EUR, JPY and GBP - (and) the USD will likely decrease against other currencies such as AUD." The risk-sensitive Australian dollar ticked up slightly to $0.6537, edging back towards Thursday's 7-1/2-month high of $0.6563.

GB News announces expansion into the US
GB News announces expansion into the US

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

GB News announces expansion into the US

GB News is expanding into the US with a new live nightly show hosted by Bev Turner. The news channel, launched in 2021, will open a new bureau in Washington DC as it launches its services across the Atlantic. The two-hour programme will begin in September from a studio 'close to the White House' and will 'bring British audiences closer than ever to the political news which unfolds each day in America'. The programme will feature 'headline-making exclusives, thought-provoking interviews with major figures, and in-depth analysis of the Trump presidency as well as stories from across the US', according to GB News. The move includes an extension of GB News' distribution across the US, with content to be made available free to American audiences. Turner said: 'With the gutsiest guests and the most iconic backdrops, I intend to keep viewers up late. Fronting the next stage of GB News's evolution is both a huge honour and an immense responsibility, and I cannot wait to represent the people's channel on a global stage. 'We will be disrupting the late-night TV space as the next day's papers land in the UK and America's prime-time analysis gears up. This affords us the chance to deliver a unique UK-USA hybrid of political, cultural and social issues from the start-line of global politics. 'We will fulfil the need for a British voice with an international perspective to help our viewers get a sense of who's really on their side. 'Tapping into Washington's heartbeat and delivering real-time perspective with editorial edge, the show will be alive, and a conversation that's punchy, intelligent and unmissable. What happens in DC reverberates in GB and we will capture every moment. 'Our highly engaged British audience understands how events in the US are directly impacting government policy and living standards here. 'We have a job to do: bridging the gap between British and American politics in the fearless style that typifies GB News. 'We will include the very best guests that Washington has to offer, alongside quintessentially British voices in an unparalleled assessment of events on both sides of the Atlantic. 'This isn't just a media experiment, this is a market intervention. And I look forward to leading it from the front.' Turner, 51, who began presenting her own show on GB News in 2022, previously hosted a talk show on LBC and has appeared on ITV's This Morning and Good Morning Britain. Michael Booker, GB News editorial director, said: 'This is a huge moment for GB News as we grow our presence and deliver more of the fearless journalism that defines us. 'The world's biggest political story is playing out in Washington, and its impact is being felt daily in towns and cities across Britain. 'More than ever before, what happens in the USA is having huge consequences, both socially and economically, for the people of Britain. 'We've seen time and again this year that a decision made on one day in Washington DC is felt the next day in Washington, Tyne and Wear. 'It's essential the people's channel is right there, reporting live, asking the tough questions, and telling it like it is. 'While others scale back on live free coverage, GB News is investing in our content. 'Our new Washington investment, our expanded programming and our brilliant on-the-ground team will ensure we're not just reporting on the story but that we're right at the heart of it.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store