-
So if you are going to release 7 to 8 billion metric tons a year into the atmosphere, predictably that increases carbon concentration in our atmosphere.
FORBES: A Call to Arms on Climate Change
-
Although the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere remains at a concentration of 0.03 percent all over the world, the amount in the air has not always been the same.
FORBES: A Call to Arms on Climate Change
-
Before we started torching carbon stored in forests and then carbon stored underground as coal and oil, the carbon dioxide concentration of our atmosphere was about 280 parts per million (ppm).
FORBES: Global Warming: Hotheads, Flatliners and Lukewarmers, Part One
-
Until now, these two giants have argued that big cuts were an inequitable way to deal with a carbon-dioxide concentration in the atmosphere that was not of their making, but because of earlier industrialisation.
ECONOMIST: The G8 summit
-
Office plants have become more popular over the last 30 years, with research reinforcing the belief that they improve the atmosphere, reduce stress, and sharpen concentration.
CNN: Office foliage for feel good factor
-
Thus, over the course of a few decades, the concentration of the gas in the atmosphere will return to pre-industrial levels.
ECONOMIST: Using the sea to grow biofuel
-
Whether that boom will happen quickly enough to stop the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere reaching dangerous levels is moot.
ECONOMIST: A fundamental change is coming sooner than you might think
-
Climate sensitivity is a key parameter for estimating the long-term temperature increase expected from a doubling of the concentration of greenhouse gas emissions in the atmosphere.
FORBES: Climate Sins and the High Priests of Peer Review
-
The low concentration of methane is in line with other studies of the Martian atmosphere performed by other instruments.
FORBES: Curiosity Sniffs The Martian Atmosphere But Finds No Sign Of Life
-
The concentration maps produced by Ibuki and OCO will help in understanding where carbon dioxide enters the atmosphere and where it gets absorbed.
ECONOMIST: Two new satellites will monitor carbon dioxide emissions