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Cross-the-Line-I.mp3
[Verse 1]
[Chorus]
[Verse 2]
[Chorus]
[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Outro]
A SCIENCE NOTE
This surge continues a troubling trend. In 2024, CO₂ levels rose by 3.6 ppm, reaching 427 ppm, a dramatic increase from pre-industrial levels. The rapid acceleration is driven by a combination of factors, including widespread wildfires, persistent fossil fuel emissions, and the intensifying impacts of the El Niño climate cycle, which has fueled hotter and drier conditions.
To put this in perspective, CO₂ concentrations have now reached levels unseen in over two million years. Unlike other pollutants, CO₂ remains in the atmosphere for hundreds to thousands of years, accumulating and compounding the greenhouse effect. We have not only increased emissions to unsustainable levels, but we have also triggered tipping points and feedback loops—such as permafrost thaw and forest dieback—that are further amplifying warming.
Simply reducing emissions is no longer enough. Immediate action is required to halt emissions entirely and reverse the self-reinforcing climate feedbacks we have set in motion. If we continue on our current trajectory, climate-driven disasters will intensify, and human life will be severely threatened within this century. Crossing multiple tipping points could lead to a domino effect, resulting in a much more rapid and severe climate change than currently projected.
Unintended Consequences and Inexplicable Consumer Behavior
Cross-the-Line-I.mp3
[Verse 1]
[Chorus]
[Verse 2]
[Chorus]
[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Outro]
A SCIENCE NOTE
This surge continues a troubling trend. In 2024, CO₂ levels rose by 3.6 ppm, reaching 427 ppm, a dramatic increase from pre-industrial levels. The rapid acceleration is driven by a combination of factors, including widespread wildfires, persistent fossil fuel emissions, and the intensifying impacts of the El Niño climate cycle, which has fueled hotter and drier conditions.
To put this in perspective, CO₂ concentrations have now reached levels unseen in over two million years. Unlike other pollutants, CO₂ remains in the atmosphere for hundreds to thousands of years, accumulating and compounding the greenhouse effect. We have not only increased emissions to unsustainable levels, but we have also triggered tipping points and feedback loops—such as permafrost thaw and forest dieback—that are further amplifying warming.
Simply reducing emissions is no longer enough. Immediate action is required to halt emissions entirely and reverse the self-reinforcing climate feedbacks we have set in motion. If we continue on our current trajectory, climate-driven disasters will intensify, and human life will be severely threatened within this century. Crossing multiple tipping points could lead to a domino effect, resulting in a much more rapid and severe climate change than currently projected.
Unintended Consequences and Inexplicable Consumer Behavior