CO2 level follow temperature changes, they do not dictate them. Most of the CO2 in the world is trapped in the oceans. Water holds more gas when cold than hot. That is why you see little bubbles in the bottom of a pan, before the water begins to boil. That is the dissolved gas coming out of solution. So when it warms the oceans release CO2 gas. ~93% of CO2 is stored in the oceans, most of the other in land biomass, and only a small amount in the atmosphere. Water vapor is the real controller of temperature, not CO2.
NO.......
CO2 level follow temperature changes, they do not dictate them. Most of the CO2 in the world is trapped in the oceans. Water holds more gas when cold than hot. That is why you see little bubbles in the bottom of a pan, before the water begins to boil. That is the dissolved gas coming out of solution. So when it warms the oceans release CO2 gas. ~93% of CO2 is stored in the oceans, most of the other in land biomass, and only a small amount in the atmosphere. Water vapor is the real controller of temperature, not CO2.