Methane (CH4) exerts about 25 times the warming effect of carbon dioxide over a 100-year period. That’s not how it really works in the atmosphere, though. Methane is very powerful, but it also breaks down quickly, generally within a couple of decades. Meanwhile, carbon dioxide (CO2) builds up cumulatively in the atmosphere—and much of whatever we emit will continue heating up the planet for hundreds to thousands of years.

https://www.climatecentral.org/climate-matters/solutions-series-cutting-methane-emissions

#Climate #Science #Nature #ClimateDiary #ClimateCrisis #FossilFuels #CarbonDioxide #CO2 # Methane #CH4

Global surveys find carbon uptake in tropics overestimated

An international team of researchers has found plants in the tropics absorb much less carbon dioxide than previous modeling had suggested, which has implications for ecosystem management.

Phys.org
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/jun/19/solar-geoengineering-risk-to-planet-earth; https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/feb/20/geoengineering-techno-fix-problems-climate-crisis. "The essential thing to understand is that #carbondioxide, once emitted, is only very slowly removed from the #atmosphere. A sizable share of it will still be keeping #Earth dangerously hot millennia from now... All of this is a huge diversion of #resources & deflection from the task at hand. As one of us likes to say, when you’re in a #climate hole, stop digging... & burning #fossilfuels. It really is, at some level, that simple."
‘Termination shock’: trust our expert warnings on geoengineering’s planetary risks

Do we really want to play dice with our planet?

The Guardian
"plants in the tropics absorb much less #carbondioxide than previous modeling had suggested, which has implications for ecosystem management." https://phys.org/news/2026-06-global-surveys-carbon-uptake-tropics.html?utm_source=nwletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=daily-nwletter
Global surveys find carbon uptake in tropics overestimated

An international team of researchers has found plants in the tropics absorb much less carbon dioxide than previous modeling had suggested, which has implications for ecosystem management.

Phys.org
Annual carbon dioxide peak reaches 432 parts per million

Scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego reported today that carbon dioxide levels at Mauna Loa Observatory reached 432.00 parts per million (ppm) in May, continuing a long trend of record-breaking annual peak readings.

Phys.org

3 countries. 16 stadiums. 104 matches. 2026 World Cup set to become ‘most #polluting’ #games ever

source: latimes.com/environment/story/…

They found that the 2026 games will generate over 9 million tons of carbon #dioxide, about double the average for the last four World Cups — 4.7 million tons. A million tons is the equivalent #emissions of about 220,000 cars on U.S. roads for a year.

#wc #worldcup #soccer #pollution #co2 #carbonDioxide #crisis #climate #environment #earth #sports #event #usa #mexico #canada #travel #flight #nature #future #fifa #humanity #fail #game

2026 World Cup set to emit record-breaking 9 million tons of carbon

The expanded number of teams at this year's men's World Cup will help make the games the worst for the climate in history, mainly because of massive air travel.

Los Angeles Times
World’s carbon budget will be exhausted in three years - report

The rate of human-induced warming remains at an all-time high, according to the latest Indicators of Global Climate Change report.

euronews

#SeaIce loss in the #Arctic has triggered a critical #TippingPoint that's destroying the food chain

Story by Sascha Pare, June 8, 2026

"The Arctic Ocean has crossed a tipping point that is wreaking havoc on the region's food chain, with potentially dire consequences for commercial fishing and the ocean's capacity to soak up carbon, a new study reports.

"Scientists found that vast areas of melting sea ice in the Arctic are leading to a significant reduction in nitrate, a key nutrient that forms the base of the marine food web and thus underpins important regional fisheries. As the ice disappears, more light hits the water's surface, promoting the growth of microscopic, plant-like organisms called phytoplankton. When phytoplankton die, their cells sink to the seafloor and are decomposed by nitrate- and oxygen-consuming bacteria.

"The new study, published May 28 in the journal Communications Earth & Environment, found that the bacteria are consuming more nitrate than the Arctic ecosystem can withstand.

"This effect, known as 'denitrification,"' is irreversible under current climate conditions because we have passed a threshold where so much sunlight reaches the ocean that it's supercharging phytoplankton's productivity, said Marta Santos-García, a doctoral student of Arctic marine biogeochemistry at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland and the first author of the study.

" 'Even if sea ice were to increase temporarily, the Arctic nutrient system responds over much longer timescales,' Santos-García told Live Science in an email. 'Short-term increases in sea ice would be unlikely to rapidly reverse the decline in nitrate inventories, which may take much longer to recover.'

"Dropping nitrate levels may eventually come back to bite phytoplankton, because these tiny organisms need nitrate to carry out photosynthesis. As a result, the transition to a low-nitrate regime could accelerate #ClimateChange, as nitrate plays an essential role in the ocean's biological pump, which takes #CarbonDioxide from the atmosphere via photosynthesis and locks it away at depth when #phytoplankton and the animals that eat it die.

" 'With nutrients such as nitrate in limited supply this mechanism cannot work effectively,' Santos-García said.

"To understand ecosystem changes in the Arctic, the researchers analyzed two decades of data from the Fram Strait, a passage between Greenland and Svalbard, Norway, that is the main gateway through which Arctic waters flow into the Atlantic Ocean. They found a sharp decline in nitrate levels in this region after 2009, which coincided with a dramatic reduction in Arctic sea ice and a gradual shift in phytoplankton communities toward smaller species that can cope with low nutrient levels.

" 'Shifts towards smaller phytoplankton have already been observed in parts of the Arctic, although these changes have not previously been linked to nitrate losses,' Santos-García said. 'This matters because smaller phytoplankton are generally less efficient at transferring energy up the food web. More of the energy is recycled within microbial communities rather than being passed on to larger zooplankton, fish, seabirds, and marine mammals.'

"Phytoplankton sit at the very bottom of the marine food chain, so the impacts of nitrate depletion will ripple through the Arctic ecosystem, impacting species at the highest levels. This could also affect fisheries in regions that depend on Arctic nutrient exports, such as the North Atlantic. But pinpointing what will happen in ecosystems downstream of the Arctic Ocean requires more research, Santos-García said.

"For years, researchers thought the long-term impact of sea ice loss in the Arctic would be an increase in phytoplankton, because more organisms can bathe in sunlight and multiply when the sea ice extent is small. However, the increase in phytoplankton since 2009 has depleted nitrate levels enough to limit future phytoplankton growth.

"Whereas phytoplankton proliferation used to be limited by how much sunlight reached surface waters, it is now controlled by nitrate levels. Therefore, nitrate must be considered as a key driver of future changes in the Arctic, Santos-García said.

" 'As nitrate is the nutrient that limits Arctic productivity, understanding these changes is therefore important not only for Arctic communities and ecosystems, but also for improving projections of future climate change,' she said."

Source:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/sea-ice-loss-in-the-arctic-has-triggered-a-critical-tipping-point-that-s-destroying-the-food-chain/ar-AA257Nx3?ocid=winp2fptaskbarhoverent&cvid=fc8829987c62417bd8585d854cb2ec7b&ei=5

Archived version:
https://archive.ph/E1Dlw

#ClimateChange #TippingPoint #GlobalWarming #WarmingOceans #ArcticEcosystems #SeaIce #OceansAreLife

MSN