Prof Helen Bostock
banner
oceanhelen.bsky.social
Prof Helen Bostock
@oceanhelen.bsky.social
Scientist Interested in all things oceans and climate (esp. carbon cycle). Bike rider, hiker and nature lover. Privileged white feminist. Advocate for diversity.
Reposted by Prof Helen Bostock
By region:
• China: flat, don’t call it a peak
• USA: up, weather & gas prices
• India: low growth, early monsoon
• EU: flat, mainly weather
• Japan: down, continuation of trend
• Shipping: flat
• Aviation: up, above pre-COVID
• Rest of the world: up

4/
November 13, 2025 at 7:07 AM
Reposted by Prof Helen Bostock
The atmosphere continues to accumulate the bulk of human CO2 emissions, with about 49% going into the atmosphere on average over the past decade. Atmospheric CO2 is expected to increase by around 2.3ppm, well below the record-setting rise of 3.7ppm in 2024.
November 13, 2025 at 3:26 AM
Reposted by Prof Helen Bostock
A new Nature paper accompanying the Global Carbon Budget finds that the land and ocean sinks are 25% smaller and 7% smaller, respectively, than they would have been without the effects of climate change over 2015-24:
Emerging climate impact on carbon sinks in a consolidated carbon budget | Nature
Despite the adoption of the Paris Agreement ten years ago, fossil CO2 emissions continue to rise, pushing atmospheric CO2 levels to 423 ppm in 2024 and driving human-induced warming to 1.36°C, within years of breaching the 1.5°C limit 1,2. Accurate reporting of anthropogenic and natural CO2 sources and sinks is a prerequisite to tracking the effectiveness of climate policy and detecting carbon sink responses to climate change. Yet notable mismatches between reported emissions and sinks have so far prevented confident interpretation of their trends and drivers 1. Here, we present and integrate recent advances in observations and process understanding to address some long-standing issues in the global carbon budget estimates. We show that the magnitude of the natural land sink is substantially smaller than previously estimated, while net emissions from anthropogenic land-use change are revised upwards 1. The ocean sink is 15% larger than the land sink, consistent with new evidence from oceanic and atmospheric observations 3,4. Climate change reduces the efficiency of the sinks, particularly on land, contributing 8.3 ± 1.4 ppm to the atmospheric CO2 increase since 1960. The combined effects of climate change and deforestation turn Southeast Asian and large parts of South American tropical forests from CO2 sinks to sources. This underscores the need to halt deforestation and limit warming to prevent further loss of carbon stored on land. Improved confidence in assessments of CO2 sources and sinks is fundamental for effective climate policy.
www.nature.com
November 13, 2025 at 3:26 AM
Reposted by Prof Helen Bostock
👩🔬 Passionate about highlighting women's achievements? WikiProject Women is dedicated to creating and improving data about women worldwide. Help close the gender gap in knowledge! Get started: www.wikidata.org/wiki/Wikidat... #WikidataWikiProjects #FindYourPeople
November 11, 2025 at 11:17 AM
Also don’t use AI to review research proposals- you are giving away someone else’s idea. As it is fed into the LLM.
November 11, 2025 at 7:34 PM
Hoping to be there. Looking forward to catching up.
November 11, 2025 at 7:29 PM