Humans Are Not Primary Drivers Of CO2 Increases

“From modern instrumental carbon isotopic data of the last 40 years, no signs of human (fossil fuel) CO2 emissions can be discerned.” –Koutsoyiannis, 2024

It is routinely claimed that a telltale sign human emissions (fossil fuels) have irrevocably altered the atmospheric CO2 concentration is a declining trend in carbon isotope 13 (δ13C), considered an interruption of natural carbon cycle processes.

But new research examining isotopic data from four observation sites (South Pole, Mauna Loa, Barrow, La Jolla – regarded as “global” in their coverage) indicates there is no isotopic pattern consistent with a human fingerprint.

“The standard metric δ13C is consistent with an input isotopic signature that is stable over the entire period of observations (>40 years), i.e., not affected by increases in human CO2 emissions.

In fact, not only has the input isotopic CO2 signature not been declining as proposed by those who believe humans are fully responsible for the increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration, but, according to multiple detection techniques using both modern data and paleo-data extending to the Little Ice Age (16th to mid-19th century), δ13C [input] has been increasing.

This directionality is the exact opposite of what is supposed to happen if fossil fuels were driving atmospheric CO2 increases.

“…for the longer subperiod lengths, 20 and 30 years, the tendencies are clearly increasing, opposite to the hypothesis that they are caused by fossil fuel emissions

“…the trends are small and always positive, again contradicting the fossil fuel origin of the phenomenon

“…from period B to C [1899-1976 to 1977-1997], we note an increase in δ13C [input,  from -13.9 to -12.9 percent], contradicting the fossil fuel origin of the phenomenon

Source: Climate Change Dispatch

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Comments (3)

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    Alan

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    It doesn’t matter if we are the only producer of CO2. It does not have the slightest effect on temperatures.

    Reply

    • Avatar

      JaKo

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      Hi Alan,
      I beg to differ — if we could produce a significant amount of CO2 and manage to keep it in the atmosphere (mainly prevent its dissolving in the oceans), the climate would cool down a liddle bit! How? Two simple pathways:
      (1) Global Greening for the day-time and
      (2) More efficient cooling for the night-time
      Mission accomplished — problem solved — just to get that darn nonsensus on the side of reason this time 😉
      Cheers, JaKo

      Reply

      • Avatar

        VOWG

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        JaKo, you know very well that CO2 is not a pollutant or a climate driver. Good grief.

        Reply

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