The Carbon Cycle Explained
Every carbon atom in your body was once CO₂ in the atmosphere — fixed by a plant, eaten by an animal, buried and released over millions of years. The carbon cycle is the biogeochemical machine that moves carbon among five great reservoirs. Understanding it explains why a seemingly small human emission can destabilise a system that has run stably for millions of years.
The Five Reservoirs
Carbon is stored in five main compartments. Their sizes differ by many orders of magnitude, and their turnover times range from days to millions of years:
| Reservoir | Carbon stock (GtC) | Turnover time | Key form |
|---|---|---|---|
| Atmosphere | ~870 | Years–decades | CO₂ (~420 ppm in 2024), CH₄ |
| Terrestrial biosphere | ~2,600 | Years–centuries | Organic C in plants (550) + soils (2,050) |
| Ocean (surface) | ~900 | Decades | Dissolved inorganic C (DIC), DOC |
| Ocean (deep) | ~37,000 | Centuries–millennia | Dissolved CO₂, HCO₃⁻, CO₃²⁻ |
| Lithosphere | ~66,000,000 | Millions of years | Carbonate rock (limestone), coal, oil, gas |
The key insight: the atmosphere holds only ~870 GtC — less than the annual plant biomass exchange, and a tiny fraction of the ocean and rock reservoirs. The atmosphere is thin and sensitive; small net transfers in or out change atmospheric CO₂ rapidly on geological timescales.
The Fast Carbon Cycle: Land and Biosphere
The fast cycle operates on timescales of years to centuries, driven by biology:
The Ocean Carbon Cycle
The ocean is the planet's largest active carbon buffer. It absorbs and releases CO₂ depending on the partial pressure difference between the surface water and the atmosphere (solubility pump):
- Cold surfaces dissolve more CO₂ (cold water → CO₂ sinks at high latitudes).
- Warm surfaces release CO₂ (warm water → CO₂ outgasses at tropics).
The biological pump reinforces carbon storage: phytoplankton fix ~50 GtC/yr via photosynthesis in the sunlit zone. When they die, a fraction sinks as "marine snow" (organic particles and shells) into the deep ocean — sequestering carbon for centuries to millennia before it is remixed by thermohaline circulation.
The Slow Carbon Cycle: Rock and Tectonics
On million-year timescales, carbon moves in and out of rock:
- Weathering: Rainwater + CO₂ forms carbonic acid (H₂CO₃), which dissolves silicate rocks, releasing bicarbonate ions (HCO₃⁻) that rivers carry to the ocean. Marine organisms build shells from CaCO₃ — calcium carbonate — which, when dead, accumulate as limestone on the seafloor. Net effect: atmospheric CO₂ is consumed.
- Volcanic outgassing: Plate subduction pulls carbonate rock into the mantle, where heat and pressure release CO₂ back to the atmosphere through volcanoes. Net effect: CO₂ is returned. Volcanoes emit ~0.1–0.3 GtC/yr — roughly 100× less than current human emissions.
- Burial of organic matter: A tiny fraction of dead organisms escapes decomposition and is buried in sediment, forming — over tens of millions of years — coal, oil, and natural gas (fossil fuels).
The slow cycle acts as Earth's thermostat on geological timescales: if Earth warms, weathering accelerates (carbonic acid reacts faster), pulling CO₂ down and cooling the planet. If it cools, weathering slows, volcanic CO₂ builds up again. This thermostat operates over millions of years — far too slow to resolve a perturbation injected in decades.
Natural Fluxes: The Numbers
The pre-industrial carbon cycle was essentially in balance: the same amount of carbon leaving the atmosphere was returning each year. Atmospheric CO₂ stayed stable at ~280 ppm for the 11,700 years of the Holocene before industrialisation.
Anthropogenic Flux: Why 10 GtC/yr Matters
Human activities currently add approximately 10–11 GtC/yr (37–40 GtCO₂/yr) to the atmosphere — primarily from fossil fuel combustion (~9 GtC/yr) and land-use change (deforestation) (~1–1.5 GtC/yr).
Compare to natural fluxes of ~200 GtC/yr: human emissions are about 5% of gross natural exchange. That sounds small. The critical difference is balance: natural gross fluxes nearly cancel out. Humanity injects a net addition with no corresponding removal, causing CO₂ to accumulate in the atmosphere.
Ocean Acidification
When CO₂ dissolves in seawater it does not simply sit there inertly. It forms carbonic acid, which dissociates:
The drop from 8.18 to 8.05 since industrialisation represents a 26% increase in hydrogen-ion concentration. This is deeply significant because carbonate ion (CO₃²⁻) is the building block that corals, oysters, sea urchins, and pteropods use to build calcium carbonate (CaCO₃) shells. As CO₃²⁻ concentration falls, organisms must spend more energy building shells and, in severe cases, existing shells dissolve.
Climate Feedbacks
The carbon cycle interacts with climate through positive feedbacks that can amplify warming beyond the direct effect of CO₂:
- Permafrost thaw: Northern permafrost soils hold ~1,500 GtC — almost double the current atmosphere. As permafrost thaws, microbes decompose ancient organic matter, releasing CO₂ and CH₄. This is a positive feedback as warming drives more release drives more warming.
- Amazon dieback: Reduced rainfall (partly driven by deforestation) stresses the Amazon, converting forest to savanna. Less forest = less evapotranspiration = less local rainfall = accelerating dieback. The Amazon may be approaching a tipping point at 20–25% deforestation (currently ~17–20%).
- Methane hydrates: Vast amounts of methane are frozen in seafloor sediments as gas hydrates — stable only at low temperature and high pressure. Deep-ocean warming could destabilise these over centuries.
- Ice-albedo feedback: Arctic sea ice reflects 80–90% of incoming sunlight. Open ocean absorbs 93–95%. Melting ice exposes dark ocean, absorbing more heat, melting more ice. Not a direct carbon feedback, but amplifies warming that drives carbon feedbacks.
The Remaining Carbon Budget
The carbon budget is the total cumulative CO₂ capable of being emitted while keeping warming below a target temperature above pre-industrial (with a given likelihood):
At current emission rates, the 1.5 °C budget is likely already exhausted or will be within this decade. Staying below 2 °C requires deep and immediate decarbonisation — roughly halving global emissions by 2030 and reaching net-zero by ~2070.
"Net zero" means human CO₂ emissions are balanced by deliberate removal (reforestation, direct air capture, enhanced weathering) — not zero emissions. The natural carbon cycle will then slowly draw down the excess atmospheric CO₂ over centuries to millennia; a return to 280 ppm will not occur on any human-relevant timescale without active intervention.