Reality Check
Penultimate Amazing
This seems to be the point that you are not getting.IOr maybe you just aren't considering how this gets averaged over the 30 year period, and it may have started much below 1% then risen to as high as 4% some year and still remain at 1% over the 3 decades in question?
You can average anything over a period and get a number. That does not mean that there is a linear increase in that thing. Try doing this with population!
A linear increase in a quantity means that its rate of increase is constant.
Thus if you plot the rate of increase in the quantity against time then you will get a flat line, i.e. the same rate of increase for any time.
When the rate of increase in CO2 per year is plotted, we see that it starts as ~0.9 ppmv/yr in the 1960s and ends at ~2.1 ppmv/yr by 2010. There are large fluctuations in this so we fit a linear line to this. That linear fit shows that the rate of increase in CO2 has a rate of increase.
Look at the second graph in CO2 shame.