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Rising carbon dioxide levels now detected in human blood

phys.org

103 points by wkrsz 5 hours ago · 131 comments

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ThomW 5 hours ago

"Yes, the planet got destroyed. But for a beautiful moment in time we created a lot of value for shareholders.“

  • throw0101a 4 hours ago

    For those unaware, this is the dialogue/caption in Tom Toro's 2012 New Yorker cartoon:

    * https://www.newyorker.com/cartoon/a16995

    * https://tomtoro.com/cartoons/

    * https://condenaststore.com/featured/the-planet-got-destroyed...

  • davidw 5 hours ago

    And parking is abundant!

  • toomuchtodo 5 hours ago

    Clean tech will save the day (low carbon generation, batteries, electrification trajectories and rate of change, broadly speaking), but the global fossil industry will need to be dismantled faster than some will like. It is a matter of survival, not politics or economics. My hunch is there are not many globally who want to suffocate while trying to exist for shareholder value.

    • tw04 5 hours ago

      I think you’re grossly underestimating how much the average American can deny with the assistance of social media.

      The number of people I personally know who thought the country was going to end on J6 who now call the entire thing a “political hoax” breaks my brain.

      Not to mention the endless posts about “where are all the people claiming COVID was so deadly now?” Who literally completely ignore the MILLIONS of deaths caused by COVID…

      Until these people have their own son or daughter killed by X - they’ll happily claim it’s not actually a problem. Or find something completely unrelated to blame instead if it doesn’t align with their Twitter feed.

    • qingcharles 8 minutes ago

      I thought the current policy was "Drill, baby, drill!"?

    • pocksuppet 4 hours ago

      But everyone wants everyone else to suffocate while delivering shareholder value for themselves. Classic Prisoner's Dilemma.

    • obsidianbases1 5 hours ago

      Where can I find some of that optimism in 2026?

    • throawayonthe 5 hours ago

      that very much is a matter of politics, people should stop being afraid to acknowledge it

      real politics are often concerned with survival

    • lapcat 5 hours ago

      > My hunch is there are not many who want to suffocate while trying to exist for shareholder value.

      Have you... read the news lately? You say it's not a matter of politics, but the politicians are absolutely trying to roll back the clock, push dirty tech, eliminate all environmental protections and regulations.

      • tw04 5 hours ago

        You do us all a disservice by saying “the politicians”. The REPUBLICANS are attempting to ignore reality and burn more fossil fuels. Nobody else in America. Name the problem, otherwise you’re implying it’s a bipartisan effort.

        • embedding-shape 4 hours ago

          To be fair, looking from the outside, democrats don't seem to be very eager to do anything about it either, most politicians in the US seems to be playing for the same team; the rich and wealthy.

        • lapcat 5 hours ago

          Obama takes credit for U.S. oil-and-gas boom: ‘That was me, people’ https://apnews.com/article/business-5dfbc1aa17701ae219239caa...

          You have to be born yesterday to believe that Democratic leaders haven't merely hand-waved and virtue-signaled about global warming for decades. I realized this back in the 1990s.

          Democrats have superior rhetoric, and they are less openly hostile, but their long record of doing nothing to help is unsurpassed. They will fiddle while Republicans burn Rome. And don't forget that Joe Manchin for example was a Democrat, one who dominated Democratic policy during the Biden administration.

          • M3L0NM4N 4 hours ago

            We need to push for clean tech obviously. I disagree with Republicans blocking wind farm construction and rolling back regulations, but American energy independence is important for national security, which is a shorter term issue than climate change. And developing more domestic clean energy helps with that as well.

          • HoldOnAMinute 4 hours ago

            Exactly. As a Democrat my eyes were opened when I saw the senior leadership do absolutely nothing to impede Trump other than form a strongly worded tweet.

          • analognoise 4 hours ago

            You’re talking badly about the people who actually crafted real industrial policy for clean energy. It was dismantled by Trump and Republicans - even when the output was going to be a factory making batteries on US soil, wind and solar farms, etc.

            Like the Republicans are absolutely embarrassing on this issue, the idea that they’re “two wings of the same bird” is nuts.

          • knowaveragejoe 4 hours ago

            You do the people causing this problem a great service with false equivocations like this. It is clear one group would prefer us to ignore the problem and do nothing at all - in fact encourage the problematic behavior - and the other would very much like to take action on the issue if they had the political power.

            • lapcat 4 hours ago

              > the other would very much like to take action on the issue if they had the political power.

              They had political power! During the Biden administration, during the Obama administration, during the Clinton administration.

              Al Gore is a famous environmentalist... for making a movie after he was out of power. What the hell did he do for the environment when he was literally in the Oval Office, at the side of the President?

              • ceejayoz 4 hours ago

                > What the hell did he do for the environment when he was literally in the Oval Office, at the side of the President?

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_activism_of_Al_G...

                Guy tried.

                • lapcat 4 hours ago

                  > Guy tried.

                  Give him a sticker.

                  • ceejayoz 4 hours ago

                    That's more perks than the job Constitutionally awards. It was created as a powerless placeholder role.

                    • lapcat 3 hours ago

                      You're missing the point, which is that by all accounts, Al Gore was a close advisor to Bill Clinton.

                      • ceejayoz 3 hours ago

                        And by all accounts, he pushed for action on climate change.

                        As it turns out, close advisors still don't get to set policy.

                        • lapcat 2 hours ago

                          Another interpretation is that Gore engaged primarily in symbolism.

                          The Kyoto Protocol itself was primarily symbolic, with little or no enforcement mechanism.

              • volkl48 20 minutes ago

                The Biden admin did try to make large-scale investments in renewables and policy changes to encourage the energy transition in the US. The situation at the end of the admin was far better than when it started.

                Why are you using a tone that implies that's not the case?

              • mrguyorama 4 hours ago

                >During the Biden administration, during the Obama administration, during the Clinton administration

                The president doesn't actually control much in the USA, despite the nonsensical shit republican congresses let them get away with. Obama, Biden, and Clinton could not do anything that wasn't approved by congress.

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Party_divisions_of_United_Stat...

                Democrats have not really held enough power to do anything at all in like 40 years. A 1 or 2 vote "majority" in a chamber is not really meant to allow you to do anything.

                Hell, that very first graph makes it pretty clear why shit is so bad in the US, we used to actually fire congress and replace them with different people.

                • lapcat 4 hours ago

                  > A 1 or 2 vote "majority" in a chamber is not really meant to allow you to do anything.

                  1) Democrats had a filibuster-proof super-majority during Obama's first term.

                  2) The filibuster is not in the Constitution. It can be abolished at any time by a simple majority vote.

                  The Democrats don't do anything because they don't want to do anything. There's always a convenient excuse. You can blame Manchin or Sinema or whomever, but they're Democrats too.

                • chucksta 3 hours ago

                  There was democratic control of the presidency and congress during Biden's term

      • embedding-shape 5 hours ago

        > but the politicians are absolutely trying to roll back the clock, push dirty tech, eliminate all environmental protections and regulations

        Yes, in one country who seems hellbent on destroying itself.

        But looking globally, more and more countries seems to get it at this point, and at least move in the right direction, compared to others. The others will make themselves irrelevant faster than the others can reach a future without fossil fuels.

        • lapcat 5 hours ago

          > Yes, in one country who seems hellbent on destroying itself.

          One of the largest countries in the world, measured by size, population, economy, and military. If you hadn't noticed, the US can do a lot of damage to the rest of the world all by itself. And pollution does not respect borders. Global warming does not respect borders.

          • embedding-shape 4 hours ago

            Right, but again, it'll matter less and less as the US hegemony is dying and other countries will pick up the torch, and the ones who are taking over seem to be a bit more willing to both commit and execute on plans to reduce pollution and global warming in general.

            • lapcat 4 hours ago

              > the US hegemony is dying

              The US just deposed the leaders of two countries, Venezuela and Iran, but ok.

              • embedding-shape 3 hours ago

                > The US just deposed the leaders of two countries, Venezuela and Iran, but ok.

                If that's how you judge what "empires" will be left in a decade, good for you, ignorance is a bliss sometimes I suppose. Don't look at how the average person live and survives, if you want to continue that way...

                • lapcat 3 hours ago

                  > If that's how you judge what "empires" will be left in a decade, good for you

                  I don't make such predictions. I'm not Nostradamus, and neither are you. I don't think anyone can predict what will happen exactly in a decade. After all, who predicted this a decade ago?

                  > ignorance is a bliss

                  This insult doesn't even make sense. I'm not experiencing bliss over the situation.

    • lenerdenator 5 hours ago

      I'd be willing to bet they go the Spaceballs route and make cans of oxygen a must-have item before they cut the emissions.

    • goodpoint 4 hours ago

      I think you are being downvoted because people only skim "Clean tech will save the day" without reading the whole text.

      • toomuchtodo 4 hours ago

        I post to educate and inform, the votes are meaningless to me as an observer and scholar field reporting. Humans are tricky, mental models are rigid and can be tied to identity. Facts, data, and information stand on their own regardless of belief. Reality > incomplete or suboptimal mental models.

    • AlexandrB 4 hours ago

      > My hunch is there are not many globally who want to suffocate while trying to exist for shareholder value.

      I hate this kind of hyperbole because it obscures the real dangers. No one is going to suffocate any time soon. Atmospheric CO2 is around 450ppm. The CO2 in a meeting room of a typical office can easily reach 1500ppm or more[1]. Is everyone in meeting rooms "suffocating"?

      [1] https://www.popsci.com/conference-carbon-dioxide-tired-offic...

    • boringg 4 hours ago

      Nuclear will save the day in combination with clean tech.

      Clean tech on its own is too slowly to be meaningfully impactful by the time we need it.

      • triceratops 4 hours ago

        I think you have that backwards. Building nuclear is slow slow slow. I can have new solar on my rooftop this year.

        • boringg 3 hours ago

          While that is true that there is a lag time to deploy nuclear - that is a vestige of the last 40 years of regulating it out of existence. That has changed - technology has improved and regulatory is under scrutiny. The difference is that once nuclear starts to roll out, as it will in the next 3-5 years, we will be seeing large deployments of clean dedicated load ripple through our electrical system in a product assembly line.

          Solar and storage are great assets - and will continue to grow but they have other sets of constraints and deploy at small scale (relatively). The large scale deployments have long time horizons.

      • toomuchtodo 4 hours ago

        It takes ~ten years to build a nuclear generator. In that time, 10TW of solar PV will be deployed at current deployment rates (1TW/year), a bit higher than total global electricity generation capacity currently (~9TW).

        Fusion is solved, at a distance, with solar, wind, and batteries. Half an hour of sunlight on Earth can power humanity for a year. Long duration storage remains to be solved for, but look how far we’ve come in 1-2 decades.

        (at this time, short duration storage will likely be LFP, sodium, and other stationary friendly chemistries, but this could change as the state of the art advances rapidly and the commodities market fluctuates)

        • boringg 3 hours ago

          Fusion isn't in our lifetimes. Its been 10 years away since the 50s - only to get more R&D grant funding for budget building.

          If it happened it would be a huge game changer for our economies but it is far away from deployment let along lab proven. It still requires more energy to start/maintain the reaction then it can produce - which is fundamental to success.

          • toomuchtodo 3 hours ago

            Solar and wind are fusion generated energy from the sun. “Fusion at a distance.” Fossil fuels are ancient sunlight, ancient fusion.

  • slibhb 4 hours ago

    People say shit like this as if fossil fuels aren't the single biggest reason we aren't starving and living in thatched huts.

    • microsoftedging 4 hours ago

      Op was referencing a comic [0]

      Furthermore, yes, getting to the point where we're no longer starving and in thatched huts did require fossil fuels, but now we know what they do, and that they're actively having an effect on the environment, and clearly us, are we so stuck in our ways we can't change our actions to secure a life for those that come after?

      [0] https://www.bureauofinternetculture.art/memes/shareholder-va...

      • slibhb 4 hours ago

        What difference does it make what they're referencing?

        I'm glad we agree that fossil fuels were necessary. It has nothing to do with "shareholder value" -- it has to do with minimizing human suffering.

        Also, it's noteworthy that US emissions peaked in 2007. We're down ~20% since then. The world is absolutely addressing climate change, and the worst case scenarios have already been avoided. Faster would be better but we're moving reasonably fast.

        • DoctorOW 4 hours ago

          > It has nothing to do with "shareholder value"

          The reason other countries are able to move so much faster than the U.S. is because parties that have power in the U.S. push back with economic concerns. The distance between "shareholder value" and "stock market performance" is miniscule.

          • slibhb 4 hours ago

            What is this obsession with "shareholder value"? Moving away from fossil fuels too quickly will hurt normal people. It will increase the cost of everything (energy prices determine the cost of stuff), make it harder to heat/cool people's homes, etc. You'll also see people burning more wood, which is far worse for air quality and may be worse in terms of CO2.

        • ChromaticPanic 4 hours ago

          Consumerism is the problem. If fossil fuels were used on necessities sure. Single use plastics, individually packaged consumables, planned obsolescence are examples of things that are not necessary. These examples have all to do with shareholder value.

          • slibhb 4 hours ago

            Consumerism is not the problem. Human beings don't stop wanting to improve their lives once they have the bare necessities and there is nothing wrong with this.

            We can have our cake and eat it, we just need to transition to cleaner forms of energy. Which we are doing.

        • gamerdonkey 4 hours ago

          > and the worst case scenarios have already been avoided.

          Do you have a source on this?

    • pluralmonad 4 hours ago

      Never heard this take before. Care to elaborate? It seems like crop failure and disease are the typical causes of food shortages, if not outright human logistical failures. Sounds like saying pouring gasoline on a tiny fire is the only reason we aren't cold (ignoring that more firewood would be the solution). An unsustainable solution is not in-fact a good solution. So if your assertion is correct, then we should all prepare for our thatched huts in which we will starve.

      • jmcqk6 4 hours ago

        Not the person you're replying to, but I think I can explain it this way:

        The quality of life of a human being is directly related to the amount of free energy (i.e. thermodynamic free energy, not free as in no cost) they have access to. Life must be able to generate more energy than it needs, even tiny bacteria. As humans developed, we found more ways to access and utilize free energy.

        There is a phrase: Energy return on investment (or EROI). You can map the development of humanity pretty cleanly to an increasing EROI over the entire course of our history.

        Fossil Carbon allowed us to explode our EROI and gave us access to never before seen amounts of free energy. Unless we find ways to maintain that EROI, our quality of life will necessarily diminish.

        Obviously we need to cut our use of fossil carbon. And if we don't, we're simply going to run out, and then we'll be stuck anyway. But we also don't have anything with a comparable EROI to replace it with.

        This is the root problem we're facing. If we had working fusion, it would be a whole lot easier to decarbonize.

      • jbboehr 4 hours ago

        > Green Revolution techniques also heavily rely on agricultural machinery and chemical fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides, and defoliants; which, as of 2014, are derived from crude oil, making agriculture increasingly reliant on crude oil extraction.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_Revolution

        • adrian_b 4 hours ago

          Those are derived from crude oil only because for a long time that has been the cheapest way to make them, not because oil were necessary in any way.

          And it was the cheapest way only because most prices are fake, because they do not correspond to the cost of closed cycles of the materials used to make a product.

          All those things require mostly energy, air, water and a few abundant minerals and metals to be made. Technologies to make them in this way have already existed for almost a century (e.g. making synthetic hydrocarbons, to replace oil), but they are still very inefficient. However, the inefficiency is mostly due to the fact that negligible amounts of money have been allocated for the development of such technologies (because as long as the use of fossil oil is permitted, there is no way for synthetic hydrocarbons to be cheaper), in comparison with the frivolous amounts of money that are wasted on various fads, like AI datacenters.

      • Krutonium 4 hours ago

        I think their point is more along the lines of the energy availability of Fossel Fuels allows for the Mass Farming and Construction that we do, not so much that we can pour it on a fire in place of wood.

        • _DeadFred_ 2 hours ago

          40–50% of the nitrogen in our bodies come from fossil fuels via synthetic fertilizers.

      • slibhb 4 hours ago

        You clearly haven't given a lot of thought to questions like "where does all this cheap food/housing/heating come from?"

        The fact that fossil fuels -- since their mass adoption in the late 19th century -- are the single largest cause of improved living conditions is standard economic history.

        > An unsustainable solution is not in-fact a good solution.

        It was a perfectly good solution. It replaced wood fires which are clearly worse. Coal was great until natural gas became available. As solar/wind/nuclear become abundant, they are conintuing to displace fossil fuels.

    • triceratops 3 hours ago

      I'm not mad about the fuel. I'm mad about the lies.

      I only paid for fuel, not lies.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ExxonMobil_climate_change_deni...

    • pjc50 4 hours ago

      All these things can be true at the same time:

      - fossil fuels have provided huge benefits

      - the accumulation of CO2 in the atmosphere is causing gradually increasing problems that will eventually become severe in some places

      - a lot of people made a lot of money along the way

      - at some point, some people chose to lie about the problems

      - lying about the problems is morally wrong

      - the transition off fossil fuels will be expensive

      - that is not a sufficient reason not to do it

    • api 4 hours ago

      This was true until the advent of nuclear energy, and became very much less true after the addition of solar PV, industrial-scale wind, and Li-Ion (and now Na-Ion) batteries.

      I'd say this statement has been almost entirely false since roughly 2020. The only areas where fossil fuels aren't readily replaceable are long-haul aviation (only a few percent of global emissions) and long-haul shipping (also a few percent). So we can probably cut emissions by 80-90% with no meaningful impact to standard of living.

      At this point the pro fossil fuel position is kind of like "you realize camp fires are why we don't get eaten by lions!" Yes, that was true once.

      BTW the degrowthers are also wrong. We can cut emissions by 80-90% without degrowth.

    • wat10000 4 hours ago

      Two things can both be true. Fossil fuels greatly improved quality of life for a large number of people in the past few centuries. And their continued use on a massive scale now threatens to hurt a lot of people.

    • CursedSilicon 4 hours ago

      I mean. At least we'd still be living as a species

    • _DeadFred_ 2 hours ago

      But society needs to progress. We left thatched huts and moved to cities with streets full of human sewage. Humans living together as a society was progress. And then we progressed further and lived together AND removed dumping sewage onto our streets.

gcanyon 5 hours ago

Higher carbon dioxide makes us dumber: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7229519/

I wonder how long before in-home CO2 extraction becomes a thing.

  • Karawebnetwork 4 hours ago

    The high school my friend's kids attend installed CO2 sensors during the pandemic as an indirect way to measure airflow.

    It turned out the building had been sealed extremely tightly to keep out the winter cold and because it is old, it does not have a proper HVAC system.

    They discovered that CO2 levels stayed around 1200 ppm throughout the entire winter, sometimes even higher. This had likely been the case for decades.

    It is a school in a small, low‑income town. I cannot help wondering how many kids were labeled as underperforming when they were actually struggling with the effects of chronically elevated CO2 levels.

    • fullstop 3 hours ago

      I went to a Catholic school and had to attend services. I thought that I was just bored, but I'm pretty sure that my yawning had more to do with elevated CO2 levels.

  • amelius 5 hours ago

    We'll have AGI not because the AI becomes smarter but because humans become stupider.

    • rozap 4 hours ago

      And the AI build out will release more co2, making the crossover point even closer.

      This is actually really funny to think about.

  • WorldMaker 3 hours ago

    I have friends that fell down air monitoring rabbit holes in the situation of the early 2020s and one of the things they have remained obsessed about is home CO2 levels and have active monitoring equipment and "pager alerts" and other things setup.

    Home carbon capture is sort of a thing already: buy more houseplants, keep them alive and healthy.

    Though the most common home interventions for now are still "open a window" and/or "run a fan to circulate the air better". I suppose it's neat that we can home automate that, if you are willing to invest in that.

    • squeegmeister 2 hours ago

      House plants make too minor a difference to be worthwhile.

      Opening windows is better but if you want a more energy efficient solution you should invest in a HRV/ERV

      • WorldMaker 19 minutes ago

        To my understanding, as with most carbon sequestration efforts, house plants are a long-term planning horizon solution. Filling your house with plants won't fix your biggest spikes in the CO2 in your home, but they'll lower the overall floor/median/average over a large enough span of time (months to years).

        Relates to the long running "joke" that the best way to sequester CO2 today is to plant new growth forests 50 years ago.

  • RobGR 4 hours ago

    I've thought about making a C02 scrubber for indoor use. The simplest way, using commercial lime, would mean replenishing a consumable to keep it going. The C02 scrubbers that acquarium owners use also don't seem to be able to be regenerated.

    I think it would be interesting to see what effect, if any, an indoor C02 level of near 0 would have on humans and mammals. Because your blood has to stay in a narrow PH range, and C02 is part of maintaining that, I wouldn't presume it would be good.

    I think a small desktop C02 scrubber might have a market in the same demographic that pays for air ionizers, de-ionizers, HEPA filters and incense burners.

  • HoldOnAMinute 4 hours ago

    It will be mandated by the state of California for new homes and office buildings.

  • kibitzor 5 hours ago

    CO2 increase of 400ppm decreases cognitive function by >20% [1]

    I frequently send this medium article [1] to friends + family for a basic dive into how CO2 affects our thinking and abilities at various levels in common areas.

    The article cites a study [2] which graphs cognitive score for different activities at different CO2 concentrations. Each activity's cognitive score is worse at higher CO2 concentrations, EXCEPT "focused activity" or "Information search" (up to some point)

    [1, note it is from 2016] https://medium.com/@joeljean/im-living-in-a-carbon-bubble-li... [2]https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26502459/

    • boringg 4 hours ago

      That article really needs a pre-and post fixing his house.

      I find it hard to believe that stat you provide -- seems like a bit of a shiny lure without much merit.

      Maybe if CO2 PPM wasn't so high I could make sense of it.

    • eitau_1 4 hours ago

      I've started questioning this premise given that concentration of CO2 in the lungs (while resting) never falls below 10000ppm (I'm possibly underestimating this number).

      Though I'm not excluding the possibility that indoor CO2 concentration strongly correlates with cognitive underperformance, which may be caused by other compounds emitted by human body.

  • api 4 hours ago

    This is honestly much, much scarier than climate change. We can adapt to a changing climate but not if we're losing IQ and focus.

zug_zug 5 hours ago

> Humans evolved in an atmosphere containing roughly 280–300 ppm of CO₂. The average annual increase over the past decade has been about 2.6 ppm per year, with 2024 recording a 3.5 ppm rise.

So currently we're at 428 with 3.5 increase per year, yeah, that's scary if it doesn't slow down soon. Makes you wonder about what indirect health side-effects that could have on us.

  • pocksuppet 4 hours ago

    Chronic exposure to CO2 levels above normal but below acute toxicity makes us dumber and more irritable.

    • Xiol 4 hours ago

      Good job we can outsource all our thinking to an agent, now.

  • chneu 4 hours ago

    When the wildfires during COVID hit some folks did some work to figure out how much of a cognitive effect wildfire smoke has on the brain. Its pretty staggering.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9196888/

    Essentially, this affects every person and animal on the planet.

  • thesz 2 hours ago

    Exercise rises CO2 levels in blood and there are specific exercises to increase CO2 tolerance. Also, extra ventilation during very long exercises (hours) lowers CO2 blood level.

    As the recovery from aerobic and resistance exercises also increase ventilation, I think we should just train a little more.

  • lenerdenator 5 hours ago

    I'm not a doctor, but I reckon it'd be same as any other case of carbon dioxide poisoning.

bob1029 4 hours ago

The human body has a fairly elegant regulation mechanism for handling variance in things like CO2:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bohr_effect

I think regular exercise can help to offset some of the effects of rising CO2 levels. Clearly not an end game solution but it's something to consider because you do have control over this one.

  • OutOfHere 3 hours ago

    A rise in blood bicarbonate, even if in the normal range, particularly at the upper end of normal, is still dangerous at times. The problem is that it has an effect of diminishing extracellular potassium which leads to spikes in heart rate, risking a cardiac emergency. I have witnessed it first hand.

throawayonthe 5 hours ago

i wonder how much specifically indoor co2 levels and levels in dense/industrial affect it

also is it accurate to say that the blood co2 level is mostly a snapshot of the moment blood is drawn? or is it affected by longterm environment

deeg 2 hours ago

I remember when I first saw an oxygen bar at a mall and thinking how stupid it was. Fools and their money...

But who's laughing now?

piloto_ciego 4 hours ago

This is actually my theory on why we're behaving so stupidly right now en masse.

I'm sure there's other papers out there, but this is the first one for this post: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S036013232...

Anyway, CO2 levels rise on planet earth, which cause indoor levels to rise too. As it turns out, because of ventilation and such, indoor levels are always a bit higher than outdoor levels. We cross some critical threshold and it gets really hard for us to take on complex cognitive tasks and make good decisions. This effects everyone equally more or less a bit worse at planning, a bit worse at solving problems, a bit worse and making critical decisions.

In the long run, planners make worse decisions, governments make work decisions, voters make worse decisions, students perform more poorly... you get the picture. Over 20 or 30 years these bad decisions start to ramp up into meaningful impacts on the world. At risk of "post hoc ergo proctor hoc"-ing myself, the tipping point for this being somewhere close to 400ppm would make a lot of sense, because people seem to be noticeably dumber some time after 2014 ish? Hard to really pin it down though, but once CO2 levels started to routinely crest over that 1000ppm it seems to me that the world started to get a lot crazier.

Like, we can blame it on one politician we don't like or another, or on bad economic forecasting, or on the schools, or on latent racism / sexism / whatever-ism. To be clear, those are all legitimate concerns, but at the end of the day we're just animals more or less stuck on this orb zipping through the cosmos and if we're suddenly unable to do high level reasoning as well wouldn't you expect to see an increase in "dumb ideas" being accepted?

NoSalt 4 hours ago

I recently purchased a small CO₂ detector off Amazon for the house and work. So far, so good ... hovering around 450ppm.

hxorr 4 hours ago

This is compounded by modern lifestyle factors such as staying indoors more, keeping the windows closed to help the aircon/heating be more efficient, etc.

I think a lot of people would be surprised at the CO2 level in different indoor environments they spend time in each day.

chneu 4 hours ago

Reminder that an individual can cut their emissions by a staggering amount by just not eating meat/dairy.

Depending on how much you consume, you can cut your emissions by 50%!

Regenerative ranching is a lie and is more based in "vibes" and "energies" than science. Making beef production 0.01% more efficient then increasing consumption does not help. Meat is a "status symbol" food based in excess, grass fed beef is just another excuse to use more resources on a good to show how much of a status symbol it is. Grass fed beef is not good for environment. That's nonsense. It's less efficient beef called green. It's more expensive so people can claim superiority for buying it.

Our ego, pride, heritage, and machismo are used to manipulate us into beating our chests and consuming more protein, cuz winners eat 1.2g protein per kg and go to the gym. See how our health is used to manipulate us and justify excessive consumption in the form of "health and fitness"? Our colonist/conquerer society is dead set on us consuming more and more. We gotta buy more funco pops to keep up with social media influencers.

At the current point, the ONLY thing that makes sense is to cut your excessive consumption. We arent removing anything from the environment at this point and "recycling" and "regeneration" are meaningless.

We've blown past every milestone of destruction we have. We consistently increase our emissions and consumption. We are not doing anything to stop this.

Reduce and sacrifice is all that matters right now. Soon, a lot of this won't be an option for people, it'll be forced on them because of our selfishness today.

Our kids and grandkids have every reason to blame us. We are finding, creating and using every excuse we can for why this isn't our fault as we bite into a cheap burger.

  • WorldMaker 3 hours ago

    Reminder that corporations spent a ton of money on propaganda to make us all believe individual sacrifices can have a noticeable impact when the largest offenders are all corporate. Even if everyone reduced their personal carbon footprint by avoiding meat/dairy and the industrial cattle farms mysteriously disappeared overnight, that's still a drop in the overall greenhouse gas emission problem. Also note that "everyone" is doing a lot of work in that sentence and also means collective effort is required to make the change noticeable/effective rather than individual efforts.

    Collective action is what matters. Corporate regulation is what matters. An enhanced EPA with real enforcement powers (not just fines, but the ability to shut down companies and/or outright murder them; which is also a larger debate because right now Americans generally don't believe in corporate murder and think corporations have a right to indefinitely exist) is what is necessary.

    It is because of our selfishness, but also our selfishness extends to not working together in enough solidarity and instead fingerpointing at individuals to "do their part, alone, and without support systems and systemic change". That's pretty selfish, too. We need systemic change. We need support systems. We need a government that prioritizes the environment and our collective health and well-being. We need companies to understand that ethics matter as much as profits and if they cannot find profits that are ethical, including and especially in relationship to their externalities like greenhouse gas emissions, then they do not deserve to make those profits and may not deserve to continue operation as a company.

    • qingcharles 3 minutes ago

      Me in Europe: 5 different bins on 5 days of the week for all the different types of recycling.

      Me in USA: insert John Travolta looking around meme consumer recycling is practically unheard of in large parts of the country.

stuaxo 5 hours ago

Plants grow faster (but not better) with more Co2 I wonder if this could be related to global obesity ?

  • beejiu 4 hours ago

    There is actually a hypothesis around this, but I don't think it's really been investigated: https://www.nature.com/articles/nutd20122

  • ArnoVW an hour ago

    That would work if obesity levels increased equally across the globe. But even if obesity does increase globally, there are very wide disparities. Contrary to popular belief, there US is not the world.

  • zdragnar 4 hours ago

    There's an oversimplified assumption here that the plants will be less nutritious, and so people will eat more calories to make up for the deficit.

    I suspect the presence of protein, fats and sugars influence the hormone production regulating appetite far more than these changes account for. I would expect the same health issues to be affecting other animal species in just as drastic a measure as humans if it were true, and also that global obesity happened at a more uniform pace rather than coinciding with the introduction of modern western eating habits and lifestyles.

    • hxorr 4 hours ago

      It's not just an assumption, there is research that shows this.

      For example: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/as-co2-levels-ris...

      More specifically, yes, protein content decreases with rising CO2 levels. Maybe not enough to cause obesity on its own, but enough to be a compounding factor. Especially when your staple is, say, rice -- which is what the paper linked above looks at.

      • zdragnar 3 hours ago

        The assumption is not the variation in the nutrient counts, but in the link to obesity.

        The rise in obesity has much stronger correlating factors than CO2 levels- diet and sedentary lifestyle being far stronger.

        This is especially obvious when looking at the cited study:

        > The new study evaluated 18 types of commonly grown rice to see how they would respond to elevated levels of carbon dioxide. In the experiments, the researchers increased ambient carbon dioxide levels to concentrations between 568 and 590 parts per million. Currently, atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations hover around 410 ppm—but at the rate they’re currently rising, they could reach the high levels used in the study by the end of the century, if action isn’t taken to curb them.

        The study examines the behavior at levels of C02 we don't currently have. The decline in nutrients has, thus far, been too small to have the impact on obesity we've already observed.

      • red75prime 4 hours ago

        Some varieties of rice are less (or positively) affected. Those varieties will be used more.

  • tonyedgecombe 5 hours ago

    If we were only eating plants then there would be no obesity crisis.

    • zdragnar 4 hours ago

      You'd be amazed at what you can do to yourself with enough fried potatoes and refined sugar.

bethekidyouwant 3 hours ago

How do you unconfound this from being inside in better sealed environments for longer periods now? Not even mentioned?

indoordin0saur 5 hours ago

This actually has me just as concerned as rising temperatures. And its a pretty hard thing to argue against, no matter your politics. Elon even brought it up when he did that interview with Trump in late 2024 to convince him that we should still care about CO2 levels in the atmosphere, even if you think the threat of a changing climate is overblown. Trump really had no response.

jmclnx 5 hours ago

Related but flagged link:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47202183

alexk307 3 hours ago

In the reference period 1999->2020, the instruments used by NHANES to track this data changed at least 3 times, they don't account for other changes to the general population that increase bicarbonate levels in serum (i.e. Number of obese Americans rose by ~40% in the reference period [1]). I'm not entirely convinced that using a proxy for C02 levels that can be confounded by a multitude of other health conditions that are common in the American population is a good way of going about this.

[1] https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/health-statisti...

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