(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
NOAA/ESRL Global Monitoring Laboratory - THE NOAA ANNUAL GREENHOUSE GAS INDEX (AGGI)
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20201127013113/https://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/aggi/
(Skip Intro)
AGGI Details and Data

NOAA's Annual Greenhouse Gas Index
(An Introduction)

The Issue – Increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases in Earth’s atmosphere represent a long-term commitment by society to living in a changing climate and, ultimately, a warmer world ( IPCC, 2014, Working Group I)
The Problem – Climate change has disruptive and uncertain consequences for agriculture, water supply, transportation, coastal communities, the economy, energy, ecosystems, and national security (IPCC, 2014, Working Group II)
Earth
The Question – How much is the human influence on climate changing, owing to continued emission of greenhouse gases?
Polar Bear

The NOAA Annual Greenhouse Gas Index (AGGI) measures the commitment society has already made to living in a changing climate. It is based on the highest quality atmospheric observations from sites around the world. Its uncertainty is very low.

aggi

Electric Blanket
The AGGI is analogous to the dial on an electric blanket. Just as the dial does not tell you exactly how hot you will get, the AGGI does not predict how much Earth’s climate will warm. You do know, however, that if the dial is turned up a little, the blanket will get warmer – and not immediately. If you turn it up a lot, you know the blanket will get a lot warmer – eventually.
Of course, the Earth System is more complicated than an electric blanket and climate change is expressed in many ways – e.g., drought, increased temperatures, altered storm patterns and precipitation rates, increased glacier melting, etc.
Collage of changing climate
cartoon
But each year the increasing AGGI reminds us that our on-going emission of long-lived greenhouse gases results in more of the sun’s heat being trapped in the Earth system. In essence, we continue to increase the setting on Earth’s “thermostat” by a small amount every year.

So, how much did the warming influence from GHGs increase last year?
How does that compare with previous years?
What gases contribute most to the change each year?

aggi figure 4
aggi figure 3
From 2018 to 2019 the dial increased another 1.8% relative to 1990 levels, a rate that has been sustained for many years.

In a nutshell:

  • The AGGI in 2019 was 1.45, which means that we’ve turned up the warming influence by 45% since 1990.
  • It took ~240 years for the AGGI to go from 0 to 1, i.e., to reach 100%, and 29 years for it to increase by another 45%.
  • In terms of CO2 equivalents, the atmosphere in 2019 contained 500 ppm, of which 410 is CO2 alone. The rest comes from other gases.
  • CO2 is by far the largest contributor to the AGGI in terms of both amount and rate of increase.
  • Note: The IPCC suggests that a constant concentration of CO2 alone at 550 ppm would lead to an average increase in Earth’s temperature of ~3°C (5.4°F).
AGGI2019 = 1.45
CO2 equivalent = 500 ppm
thermometer

The NOAA AGGI is given in more detail at
www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/aggi/aggi.html


Click Here for AGGI Details and Data