For millennia, the tundra regions of the Arctic drew in carbon from the atmosphere and locked it in permafrost. That is the ...
The Arctic region is no longer a carbon sink. It stores less greenhouse gas than it emits, largely due to increased wildfires ...
For millennia, Arctic ecosystems have stored more carbon dioxide than they release, but that has shifted as warming ...
Wildfires and thawing permafrost are causing the Arctic region to release more carbon dioxide and methane than its plants remove.
On Thursday, a group of German scientists—Helge Goessling, Thomas Rackow, and Thomas Jung—released a paper that attempts to ...
Exploring Immense Potential Of Oceans To Slow Climate Change By Towseef Hassan  The ocean, rightly called “the blue lung of ...
The Arctic tundra, which is experiencing warming and increased wildfire, is now emitting more carbon than it stores. Read more at straitstimes.com.
The ground then radiates long wave infrared energy into the atmosphere which is then effectively absorbed by greenhouse gases. The greenhouse gases then go on to radiate that energy in all ...
Greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere reached ... Just under half of CO2 emissions remain in the atmosphere, while the rest are absorbed by the ocean and land ecosystems.
Meanwhile, the amount of greenhouse gases absorbed by forests and other sources in 2022/23 fell 6.4% to 50.2 million tons due to the ageing of planted forests, the ministry said. The amount ...