The amount of CO2 will reach a record in the future

According to experts on climate change, CO 2 emissions will reach record levels if temperatures and sea levels continue to rise.

Experts from the American Meteorological Association recently released a report showing greenhouse gases, CO 2 concentrations, sea levels, global temperatures and many climate indicators. Other weights all increased compared to last year.

Picture 1 of The amount of CO2 will reach a record in the future
Image of sea surface temperature in 2013. Red area shows a high sea surface temperature;Blue represents a higher than average heat background.

Accordingly, experts based on data provided by 425 scientists from 57 countries around the world. These reports provide global climate indicators, remarkable weather events and other data collected from environmental monitoring stations, air, soil, sea and ice measuring tools.

Picture 2 of The amount of CO2 will reach a record in the future
The atmospheric level of CO2 measured in Hawaii is over 400ppm in 2013.

Kathryn Sullivan, an employee of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), said: "These findings help reinforce the data scientists have collected over the past decades to prove that our planet is becoming more and more warm. "

The atmospheric level of CO2 measured in Hawaii is more than 400ppm in 2013 - the highest level in human history.

Picture 3 of The amount of CO2 will reach a record in the future
With rising air and sea temperatures, mountain glaciers continue to shrink.The picture here is Careser Glacier (Italy) in 1933 (above) and 2012 (below).

The increase in CO 2 will cause the temperature of the Earth to heat up and as a result, the ice at the two ends will melt, sea water will rise and more people will lose their homes. Even by the end of the century, some places like the Maldivian island would be in the sea if the Earth continued to heat up.

Picture 4 of The amount of CO2 will reach a record in the future
The map shows that the mean sea level in 2013 is above or below the average.The area with sea level rise to higher than the average of 1993-2010 is green, the average is white and where the sea level falls below average is brown.

Air temperatures around the world have also increased significantly, partly as a result of many melting ice sheets, leading to rising sea levels. Many cities like Fairbanks, Alaska . have 36 days of high temperatures above 27 degrees Celsius last summer. Along with that are many extreme weather phenomena such as super typhoon Haiyan - devastating most Southeast Asian countries in November 2013.

Picture 5 of The amount of CO2 will reach a record in the future
Earth surface temperature in 2013.

Kathryn Sullivan said: "We are continuing to synthesize specific data to compare the increase in temperature, sea level, CO2 concentration . so that everyone can improve their responsibility to protect the environment. more Earth field ".

Sea level: Due to the melting of the ice, the sea level increases by 0.15 inches (3.8mm).

Ice in Antarctica: although the Antarctic ice has increased, the glaciers on the continent's continent continue to melt and shrink.

Ice in the Arctic: Large ice sheets in the Arctic melt fast, down about 14% every decade.

Harsh weather: Many storms like super typhoon Haiyan has the strongest wind speed ever recorded by a tropical storm with sustained winds of 196 mph (315 km / h). Floods in Central Europe caused billions of dollars in damage.

Earth's temperature : Earth's heat rises rapidly in areas like Fairbanks, Alaska, which set a record - 36 days with temperatures of 80 degrees F (27 degrees C) or higher.

Warm waters : Sea surface temperature in 2013 also increased.