4.6 Editorial Material

Comment on Extreme Level of CO2 Accumulation Into the Atmosphere due to the Unequal Global Carbon Emission and Sequestration by M. F. Hossain

Journal

WATER AIR AND SOIL POLLUTION
Volume 233, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s11270-022-05841-0

Keywords

Global Carbon Cycle; Climate Change; Carbon Dioxide; Human Health

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This article discusses the impacts of increasing greenhouse gas concentrations on natural ecosystems and human populations, pointing out the flaws and inaccuracies in previous studies.
Rising atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases are driving modern climate change and, therefore, are having substantial and sustained impacts on natural ecosystems and human populations. In a recent article in this journal, M. F. Hossain (2022. Water, Air, and Soil Pollution. 233:105) calculated how anthropogenic activity has perturbed the global carbon cycle, forecast future increases in atmospheric CO2 concentrations, and discussed possible health consequences from rising CO2 levels. However, Hossain's article gave an inaccurate representation of how human actions have altered the global carbon cycle. He substantially underestimated the magnitude of anthropogenic disturbances in terms of CO2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion and land use change and also underestimated the role of land and ocean processes in removing some of the emitted CO2 from the atmosphere. At the same time, he overestimated the rate at which atmospheric CO2 levels are increasing, resulting in a highly improbable forecast for atmospheric CO2 concentrations later in this century. He also exaggerated the health impacts from exposure to those CO2 levels as being severe and deadly, when our current understanding suggests that the direct effects are uncertain but likely minor. Because each of the major components of Hossain (2022) contains substantial and fundamental flaws, I warn readers to be skeptical before incorporating its findings into their understanding of carbon cycling, climate change, and human health.

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