In recent decades, select groups of
scientists and politicians have blamed carbon dioxide (CO2) -- a greenhouse gas
-- for increasing global temperatures to dangerous levels.
Is CO2 really destroying our planet?
CO2 is an odorless, invisible, trace gas in the atmosphere that
acts as an important source of life for everything that lives on earth. In
fact, plant and animal life on earth would be impossible without CO2.
CO2 is an integral part of the photosynthesis process. Plants
synthesize CO2 and water to produce chemical energy that sustains the plant.
Together with water and sunlight, CO2 acts as the elixir of life for the plant
and animal kingdom.
Historical data suggest that increased CO2 concentrations have
helped plant growth globally, enabling civilizations to increase their
agricultural output drastically. Record food crop outputs in recent decades are
due in significant part to increased atmospheric CO2 concentrations.
Production of major crops like wheat, rice, maize, and soybeans
increases with increase in atmospheric CO2 concentrations.
After modern instrumental temperature records began, the past
three decades were the warmest. Yet those were the same decades where plants
registered their highest growth. Large-scale deforestation and occasional extreme
weather events did not impede this record growth.
Zhu et al. captured relative change of leaf area index
from 1982 to 2009 due to CO2 fertilization and found that most parts of the
world recorded an increase in plant canopy by as much as 14 percent, primarily
due to increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration.
Li et al. found that net primary production -- the
productivity of individual or groups of plants, increased by 21 percent
globally between 1962 and 2010. The increase in atmospheric CO2 concentrations
was found to be the dominant factor for this extraordinary increase in plant growth.
How did CO2 -- the elixir of life -- turn out to be the evil gas
of 21st century?
The special interest in CO2 began when a handful of scientists,
backed by political elements, proposed their hypothesis -- one which suggested
that CO2 emission from anthropogenic sources, such as coal-fired plants, is the
primary reason for what they allege is a dangerous increase in earth’s
temperature.
Despite the lack of observational evidence, political institutions
popularized this hypothesis through state-sponsored research programs.
In order to sustain their claims, these climate alarmists designed
climate computer models to manufacture friendly results that supported their
hypothesis. Through these computer models, the alarmists suggested that the
earth was at a point of no return.
They insisted that unless the current CO2 emission rates are
reduced, global temperature levels will rise drastically, causing a collapse of
major life-sustaining systems.
To further consolidate their results, alarmists engaged in a deliberate
manipulation of global climate datasets -- a scientific scandal that was
popularly known as Climategate.
In 2009 and 2011, leaked emails from the servers of leading climate
research universities exposed how top climate scientists altered global temperature datasets to project a
significant warming rate, in order to sustain their alarmist claims.
Other climate scientists challenged the alarmists, but their
agenda only gained momentum.
The alarmist claims eventually found global acceptance by
political lobbyists and were formally institutionalized through a global
agreement to reduce CO2 emissions -- the Paris Agreement.
However, soon after the formal initiation of the Paris Agreement,
a series of new research findings proved the alarmist hypothesis
wrong. The findings exposed how the computer climate models exaggerated the warming, by overemphasizing the role of CO2 in increasing the temperature levels.
The scientists within the alarmist camp had no option but to acknowledge the grand failure of climate models -- a
flaw that was pointed out by other climate scientists for nearly a
decade.
There has been a 40 percent increase in atmospheric CO2
concentration since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. This has
resulted in greening of the earth, with plants recording high growth rates due
to the CO2 levels.
World food production must increase by more than 70 percent from
today’s levels, to meet global food demand in the year 2050. Without the
benefits of CO2, world food supply will fall short unless huge new tracts of
land are converted from wilderness habit to farmland.
The world has seen record crop outputs in the past two decades. If
anything, the carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere has helped life on
earth.
It is time for the global mainstream media to stop calling CO2 a
curse and start calling it a blessing. It is time to acknowledge the immense
benefits that humans have enjoyed due to CO2.
The pseudo-scientific climate scare propaganda must be stopped
from causing more damage to the future of billions who live in poverty.
Vijay Jayaraj (M.Sc., Environmental Science, University of
East Anglia, England), Research Associate for Developing Countries for
the Cornwall Alliance for
the Stewardship of Creation, lives in New Delhi, India.
http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2017/12/blessing_or_curse_the_curious_case_of_carbon_dioxide.html