The reason for the accumulation is simple: Human activities are emitting more carbon dioxide than the planet’s natural processes (uptake by plants and the ocean) can remove. It’s like a bathtub where the flow of water out of the faucet is more than the flow through the drain, causing the water level in the bath to rise.
This 5-minute video by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine shows the many lines of evidence that human activities are causing greenhouse gases to increase.
Among the evidence:
- Ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica tell us that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas concentrations were relatively stable for thousands of years, but began to rise around 200 years ago, when humans began to engage in large-scale agriculture and industry. Concentrations of these gases are now higher than at any time for which we have ice core records, which stretch back 800,000 years.
- Carbon dioxide from fossil fuels has a certain isotopic “signature” (an indication of atomic weight) that differs from other sources of CO2. Scientists measure the different isotopes, which confirms that the increase in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is predominantly from fossil fuel combustion.
- Some greenhouse gases, such as industrial halocarbons, are only made by humans. Their accumulation in the atmosphere can only be explained by human activity.
Other factors capable of changing the climate, like volcanic eruptions and changes in the sun’s intensity, cannot by themselves explain the changes we’ve recently observed in the Earth’s climate. The figure below shows the outcomes of different computer simulations of climate (see caption for details). Only the simulations that included human influences exhibited warming similar to the observed temperatures.