Climate change
Contemporary climate change includes both global warming and its impacts on Earth's weather patterns. There have been previous periods of climate change, but the current changes are distinctly more rapid and not due to natural causes.[2] Instead, they are caused by the emission of greenhouse gases, mostly carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane. Burning fossil fuels for energy use creates most of these emissions. Agriculture, steelmaking, cement production, and forest loss are additional sources.[3] Greenhouse gases are transparent to sunlight, allowing it through to heat the Earth's surface. When the Earth emits that heat as infrared radiation the gases absorb it, trapping the heat near the Earth's surface. As the planet heats up it causes changes like the loss of sunlight-reflecting snow cover, amplifying global warming.[4]
On land, temperatures have risen about twice as fast as the global average. Deserts are expanding, while heat waves and wildfires are becoming more common.[5] Increased warming in the Arctic has contributed to melting permafrost, glacial retreat and sea ice loss.[6] Higher temperatures are also causing more intense storms and other weather extremes.[7] Rapid environmental change in mountains, coral reefs, and the Arctic is forcing many species to relocate or become extinct.[8] Climate change threatens people with food and water scarcity, increased flooding, extreme heat, more disease, and economic loss. Human migration and conflict can be a result.[9] The World Health Organization calls climate change the greatest threat to global health in the 21st century.[10] Even if efforts to minimise future warming are successful, some effects will continue for centuries. These include sea level rise, and warmer, more acidic oceans.[11]
Many of these impacts are already felt at the current level of warming (1.2 °C). Additional warming will increase these impacts and may trigger tipping points, such as the melting of the Greenland ice sheet.[12] Under the 2015 Paris Agreement, nations collectively agreed to keep warming "well under 2 °C". However, with pledges made under the Agreement, global warming would still reach about 2.7 °C by the end of the century.[13] Limiting warming to 1.5 °C will require halving emissions by 2030 and achieving net-zero emissions by 2050.[14]
Making deep cuts in emissions will require switching away from burning fossil fuels and towards using electricity generated from low-carbon sources. This includes phasing out coal-fired power plants, vastly increasing use of wind and solar power, switching to electric vehicles, switching to heat pumps in buildings, and taking measures to conserve energy.[15][16] Carbon can also be removed from the atmosphere, for instance by increasing forest cover.[17] While communities may adapt to climate change through efforts like better coastline protection, they cannot avert the risk of severe, widespread, and permanent impacts.[18]
Terminology
Before the 1980s, it was unclear whether warming by increased greenhouse gases would dominate aerosol-induced cooling. Scientists then often used the term inadvertent climate modification to refer to the human impact on the climate. In the 1980s, the terms global warming and climate change were popularised. The former refers only to increased surface warming, the latter describes the full effect of greenhouse gases on the climate.[20] Global warming became the most popular term after NASA climate scientist James Hansen used it in his 1988 testimony in the U.S. Senate.[21] In the 2000s, the term climate change increased in popularity.[22] Global warming usually refers to human-induced warming of the Earth system, whereas climate change can refer to natural or anthropogenic change.[23] The two terms are often used interchangeably.[24]
Various scientists, politicians and media figures have adopted the terms climate crisis or climate emergency to talk about climate change, and global heating instead of global warming.[25] The policy editor-in-chief of The Guardian said they included this language in their editorial guidelines "to ensure that we are being scientifically precise, while also communicating clearly with readers on this very important issue".[26] In 2019, Oxford Languages chose climate emergency as its word of the year, defining it as "a situation in which urgent action is required to reduce or halt climate change and avoid potentially irreversible environmental damage resulting from it".[27][28]
Observed temperature rise
Multiple independent instrumental datasets show that the climate system is warming.[31] The 2011–2020 decade warmed to an average 1.09 °C [0.95–1.20 °C] compared to the pre-industrial baseline (1850–1900).[32] Surface temperatures are rising by about 0.2 °C per decade,[33] with 2020 reaching a temperature of 1.2 °C above the pre-industrial era.[34] Since 1950, the number of cold days and nights has decreased, and the number of warm days and nights has increased.[35]
There was little net warming between the 18th century and the mid-19th century. Climate information for that period comes from climate proxies, such as trees and ice cores.[36] Thermometer records began to provide global coverage around 1850.[37] Historical patterns of warming and cooling, like the Medieval Climate Anomaly and the Little Ice Age, did not occur at the same time across different regions. Temperatures may have reached as high as those of the late-20th century in a limited set of regions.[38] There have been prehistorical episodes of global warming, such as the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum.[39] However, the modern observed rise in temperature and CO2 concentrations has been so rapid that even abrupt geophysical events in Earth's history do not approach current rates.[40]
Evidence of warming from air temperature measurements are reinforced with a wide range of other observations.[41][42] There has been an increase in the frequency and intensity of heavy precipitation, melting of snow and land ice, and increased atmospheric humidity.[43] Flora and fauna are also behaving in a manner consistent with warming; for instance, plants are flowering earlier in spring.[44] Another key indicator is the cooling of the upper atmosphere, which demonstrates that greenhouse gases are trapping heat near the Earth's surface and preventing it from radiating into space.[45]
Regions of the world warm at differing rates. The pattern is independent of where greenhouse gases are emitted, because the gases persist long enough to diffuse across the planet. Since the pre-industrial period, the average surface temperature over land regions has increased almost twice as fast as the global-average surface temperature.[46] This is because of the larger heat capacity of oceans, and because oceans lose more heat by evaporation.[47] The thermal energy in the global climate system has grown with only brief pauses since at least 1970, and over 90% of this extra energy has been stored in the ocean.[48][49] The rest has heated the atmosphere, melted ice, and warmed the continents.[50]
The Northern Hemisphere and the North Pole have warmed much faster than the South Pole and Southern Hemisphere. The Northern Hemisphere not only has much more land, but also more seasonal snow cover and sea ice. As these surfaces flip from reflecting a lot of light to being dark after the ice has melted, they start absorbing more heat.[51] Local black carbon deposits on snow and ice also contribute to Arctic warming.[52] Arctic temperatures are increasing at over twice the rate of the rest of the world.[53] Melting of glaciers and ice sheets in the Arctic disrupts ocean circulation, including a weakened Gulf Stream, further changing the climate.[54]
Drivers of recent temperature rise
The climate system experiences various cycles on its own which can last for years (such as the El Niño–Southern Oscillation), decades or even centuries.[55] Other changes are caused by an imbalance of energy that is "external" to the climate system, but not always external to the Earth.[56] Examples of external forcings include changes in the concentrations of greenhouse gases, solar luminosity, volcanic eruptions, and variations in the Earth's orbit around the Sun.[57]
To determine the human contribution to climate change, known internal climate variability and natural external forcings need to be ruled out. A key approach is to determine unique "fingerprints" for all potential causes, then compare these fingerprints with observed patterns of climate change.[58] For example, solar forcing can be ruled out as a major cause. Its fingerprint would be warming in the entire atmosphere. Yet, only the lower atmosphere has warmed, consistent with greenhouse gas forcing.[59] Attribution of recent climate change shows that the main driver is elevated greenhouse gases, with aerosols having a dampening effect.[60]
Greenhouse gases
The Earth absorbs sunlight, then radiates it as heat. Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere absorb and reemit infrared radiation, slowing the rate at which it can pass through the atmosphere and escape into space.[61] Before the Industrial Revolution, naturally-occurring amounts of greenhouse gases caused the air near the surface to be about 33 °C warmer than it would have been in their absence.[62][63] While water vapour (~50%) and clouds (~25%) are the biggest contributors to the greenhouse effect, they increase as a function of temperature and are therefore feedbacks. On the other hand, concentrations of gases such as CO2 (~20%), tropospheric ozone,[64] CFCs and nitrous oxide are not temperature-dependent, and are therefore external forcings.[65]
Human activity since the Industrial Revolution, mainly extracting and burning fossil fuels (coal, oil, and natural gas),[66] has increased the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, resulting in a radiative imbalance. In 2019, the concentrations of CO2 and methane had increased by about 48% and 160%, respectively, since 1750.[67] These CO2 levels are higher than they have been at any time during the last 2 million years. Concentrations of methane are far higher than they were over the last 800,000 years.[68]
Global anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions in 2018, excluding those from land use change, were equivalent to 52 billion tonnes of CO2. Of these emissions, 72% was CO2, 19% was methane, 6% was nitrous oxide, and 3% was fluorinated gases.[69] CO2 emissions primarily come from burning fossil fuels to provide energy for transport, manufacturing, heating, and electricity.[3] Additional CO2 emissions come from deforestation and industrial processes, which include the CO2 released by the chemical reactions for making cement, steel, aluminum, and fertiliser.[70] Methane emissions come from livestock, manure, rice cultivation, landfills, wastewater, and coal mining, as well as oil and gas extraction.[71] Nitrous oxide emissions largely come from the microbial decomposition of fertiliser.[72]
Despite the contribution of deforestation to greenhouse gas emissions, the Earth's land surface, particularly its forests, remain a significant carbon sink for CO2. Natural processes, such as carbon fixation in the soil and photosynthesis, more than offset the greenhouse gas contributions from deforestation. The land-surface sink is estimated to remove about 29% of annual global CO2 emissions.[73] The ocean also serves as a significant carbon sink via a two-step process. First, CO2 dissolves in the surface water. Afterwards, the ocean's overturning circulation distributes it deep into the ocean's interior, where it accumulates over time as part of the carbon cycle. Over the last two decades, the world's oceans have absorbed 20 to 30% of emitted CO2.[74]
Aerosols and clouds
Air pollution, in the form of aerosols, not only puts a large burden on human health, but also affects the climate on a large scale.[75] From 1961 to 1990, a gradual reduction in the amount of sunlight reaching the Earth's surface was observed, a phenomenon popularly known as global dimming,[76] typically attributed to aerosols from biofuel and fossil fuel burning.[77] Globally, aerosols have been declining since 1990, meaning that they no longer mask greenhouse gas warming as much.[78]
Aerosols scatter and absorb solar radiation. They also have indirect effects on the Earth's radiation budget. Sulfate aerosols act as cloud condensation nuclei and lead to clouds that have more and smaller cloud droplets. These clouds reflect solar radiation more efficiently than clouds with fewer and larger droplets.[79] They also reduce the growth of raindrops, which makes clouds more reflective to incoming sunlight.[80] Indirect effects of aerosols are the largest uncertainty in radiative forcing.[81]
While aerosols typically limit global warming by reflecting sunlight, black carbon in soot that falls on snow or ice can contribute to global warming. Not only does this increase the absorption of sunlight, it also increases melting and sea-level rise.[82] Limiting new black carbon deposits in the Arctic could reduce global warming by 0.2 °C by 2050.[83]
Changes of the land surface
Humans change the Earth's surface mainly to create more agricultural land. Today, agriculture takes up 34% of Earth's land area, while 26% is forests, and 30% is uninhabitable (glaciers, deserts, etc.).[85] The amount of forested land continues to decrease, largely due to conversion to cropland in the tropics.[86] This deforestation is the most significant aspect of land surface change affecting global warming. The main causes of deforestation are: permanent land-use change from forest to agricultural land producing products such as beef and palm oil (27%), logging to produce forestry/forest products (26%), short term shifting cultivation (24%), and wildfires (23%).[87]
Land use changes not only affect greenhouse gas emissions. The type of vegetation in a region affects the local temperature. It impacts how much of the sunlight gets reflected back into space (albedo), and how much heat is lost by evaporation. For instance, the change from a dark forest to grassland makes the surface lighter, causing it to reflect more sunlight. Deforestation can also affect temperatures by modifying the release of chemical compounds that influence clouds, and by changing wind patterns.[88] In tropic and temperate areas the net effect is to produce significant warming, while at latitudes closer to the poles a gain of albedo (as forest is replaced by snow cover) leads to a cooling effect.[88] Globally, these effects are estimated to have led to a slight cooling, dominated by an increase in surface albedo.[89]
Solar and volcanic activity
Physical climate models are unable to reproduce the rapid warming observed in recent decades when taking into account only variations in solar output and volcanic activity.[90] As the Sun is the Earth's primary energy source, changes in incoming sunlight directly affect the climate system.[81] Solar irradiance has been measured directly by satellites,[91] and indirect measurements are available from the early 1600s onwards.[81] There has been no upward trend in the amount of the Sun's energy reaching the Earth.[92] Further evidence for greenhouse gases causing global warming comes from measurements that show a warming of the lower atmosphere (the troposphere), coupled with a cooling of the upper atmosphere (the stratosphere).[93] If solar variations were responsible for the observed warming, the troposphere and stratosphere would both warm.[59]
Explosive volcanic eruptions represent the largest natural forcing over the industrial era. When the eruption is sufficiently strong (with sulfur dioxide reaching the stratosphere), sunlight can be partially blocked for a couple of years. The temperature signal lasts about twice as long. In the industrial era, volcanic activity has had negligible impacts on global temperature trends.[94] Present-day volcanic CO2 emissions are equivalent to less than 1% of current anthropogenic CO2 emissions.[95]
Climate change feedback
The response of the climate system to an initial forcing is modified by feedbacks: increased by self-reinforcing feedbacks and reduced by balancing feedbacks.[97] The main reinforcing feedbacks are the water-vapour feedback, the ice–albedo feedback, and the net effect of clouds.[98][99] The primary balancing mechanism is radiative cooling, as Earth's surface gives off more heat to space in response to rising temperature.[100] In addition to temperature feedbacks, there are feedbacks in the carbon cycle, such as the fertilizing effect of CO2 on plant growth.[101] Uncertainty over feedbacks is the major reason why different climate models project different magnitudes of warming for a given amount of emissions.[102]
As the air is warmed by greenhouse gases, it can hold more moisture. Water vapour is a potent greenhouse gas, so this further heats the atmosphere.[98] If cloud cover increases, more sunlight will be reflected back into space, cooling the planet. If clouds become higher and thinner, they act as an insulator, reflecting heat from below back downwards and warming the planet.[103] The effect of clouds is the largest source of feedback uncertainty.[104]
Another major feedback is the reduction of snow cover and sea ice in the Arctic, which reduces the reflectivity of the Earth's surface.[105] More of the Sun's energy is now absorbed in these regions, contributing to amplification of Arctic temperature changes.[106] Arctic amplification is also melting permafrost, which releases methane and CO2 into the atmosphere.[107] Climate change can also cause methane releases from wetlands, marine systems, and freshwater systems.[108] Overall, climate feedbacks are expected to become increasingly positive.[109]
Around half of human-caused CO2 emissions have been absorbed by land plants and by the oceans.[110] On land, elevated CO2 and an extended growing season have stimulated plant growth. Climate change increases droughts and heat waves that inhibit plant growth, which makes it uncertain whether this carbon sink will continue to grow in the future.[111] Soils contain large quantities of carbon and may release some when they heat up.[112] As more CO2 and heat are absorbed by the ocean, it acidifies, its circulation changes and phytoplankton takes up less carbon, decreasing the rate at which the ocean absorbs atmospheric carbon.[113] Overall, at higher CO2 concentrations the Earth will absorb a reduced fraction of our emissions.[114]
Future warming and the carbon budget
A climate model is a representation of the physical, chemical, and biological processes that affect the climate system.[115] Models are used to calculate the degree of warming future emissions will cause when accounting for the strength of climate feedbacks.[116][117] Models also include natural processes like changes in the Earth's orbit, historical changes in the Sun's activity, and volcanic forcing.[118] In addition to estimating future temperatures, they reproduce and predict the circulation of the oceans, the annual cycle of the seasons, and the flows of carbon between the land surface and the atmosphere.[119]
The physical realism of models is tested by examining their ability to simulate contemporary or past climates.[120] Past models have underestimated the rate of Arctic shrinkage[121] and underestimated the rate of precipitation increase.[122] Sea level rise since 1990 was underestimated in older models, but more recent models agree well with observations.[123] The 2017 United States-published National Climate Assessment notes that "climate models may still be underestimating or missing relevant feedback processes".[124]
A subset of climate models add societal factors to a simple physical climate model. These models simulate how population, economic growth, and energy use affect – and interact with – the physical climate. With this information, these models can produce scenarios of future greenhouse gas emissions. This is then used as input for physical climate models to generate climate change projections.[125] In some scenarios emissions continue to rise over the century, while others have reduced emissions.[126] Emissions scenarios can be combined with modelling of the carbon cycle to predict how atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases might change in the future.[127] According to these combined models, by 2100 the atmospheric concentration of CO2 could be as low as 380 or as high as 1400 ppm, depending on the socioeconomic scenario and the mitigation scenario.[128]
The IPCC Sixth Assessment Report projects that global warming is very likely to reach 1.0 °C to 1.8 °C by the late 21st century under the very low GHG emissions scenario. In an intermediate scenario global warming would reach 2.1 °C to 3.5 °C, and 3.3 °C to 5.7 °C under the very high GHG emissions scenario.[129] These projections are based on climate models in combination with observations.[130]
The remaining carbon budget is determined by modelling the carbon cycle and the climate sensitivity to greenhouse gases.[131] According to the IPCC, global warming can be kept below 1.5 °C with a two-thirds chance if emissions after 2018 do not exceed 420 or 570 gigatonnes of CO2.[lower-alpha 1] This corresponds to 10 to 13 years of current emissions. There are high uncertainties about the budget. For instance, it may be 100 gigatonnes of CO2 smaller due to methane release from permafrost and wetlands.[133] However, it is clear that fossil fuel resources are too abundant for shortages to be relied on to limit carbon emissions in the 21st century.[134]
Impacts
Physical environment
The environmental effects of climate change are broad and far-reaching, affecting oceans, ice, and weather. Changes may occur gradually or rapidly. Evidence for these effects comes from studying climate change in the past, from modelling, and from modern observations.[135] Since the 1950s, droughts and heat waves have appeared simultaneously with increasing frequency.[136] Extremely wet or dry events within the monsoon period have increased in India and East Asia.[137] The rainfall rate and intensity of hurricanes and typhoons is likely increasing.[7] Frequency of tropical cyclones has not increased as a result of climate change.[138] However, a study review article published in 2021 in Nature Geoscience concluded that the geographic range of tropical cyclones will probably expand poleward in response to climate warming of the Hadley circulation.[139]
Global sea level is rising as a consequence of glacial melt, melt of the ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica, and thermal expansion. Between 1993 and 2020, the rise increased over time, averaging 3.3 ± 0.3 mm per year.[141] Over the 21st century, the IPCC projects that in a very high emissions scenario the sea level could rise by 61–110 cm.[142] Increased ocean warmth is undermining and threatening to unplug Antarctic glacier outlets, risking a large melt of the ice sheet[143] and the possibility of a 2-meter sea level rise by 2100 under high emissions.[144]
Climate change has led to decades of shrinking and thinning of the Arctic sea ice.[145] While ice-free summers are expected to be rare at 1.5 °C degrees of warming, they are set to occur once every three to ten years at a warming level of 2 °C.[146] Higher atmospheric CO2 concentrations have led to changes in ocean chemistry. An increase in dissolved CO2 is causing oceans to acidify.[147] In addition, oxygen levels are decreasing as oxygen is less soluble in warmer water.[148] Dead zones in the ocean, regions with very little oxygen, are expanding too.[149]
Tipping points and long-term impacts
The greater the amount of global warming, the greater the risk of passing through ‘tipping points’, thresholds beyond which certain impacts can no longer be avoided even if temperatures are reduced.[150] An example is the collapse of West Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets, where a temperature rise of 1.5 to 2 °C may commit the ice sheets to melt, although the time scale of melt is uncertain and depends on future warming.[151][152] Some large-scale changes could occur over a short time period, such as a collapse of certain ocean currents. Of particular concern is a shutdown of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation,[153], which would trigger major climate changes in the North Atlantic, Europe, and North America.[154]
The long-term effects of climate change include further ice melt, ocean warming, sea level rise, and ocean acidification. [155] On the timescale of centuries to millennia, the magnitude of climate change will be determined primarily by anthropogenic CO2 emissions. This is due to CO2's long atmospheric lifetime.[156] Oceanic CO2 uptake is slow enough that ocean acidification will continue for hundreds to thousands of years.[157] These emissions are estimated to have prolonged the current interglacial period by at least 100,000 years.[158] Sea level rise will continue over many centuries, with an estimated rise of 2.3 metres per degree Celsius (4.2 ft/°F) after 2000 years.[159]
Nature and wildlife
Recent warming has driven many terrestrial and freshwater species poleward and towards higher altitudes.[160] Higher atmospheric CO2 levels and an extended growing season have resulted in global greening. However, heatwaves and drought have reduced ecosystem productivity in some regions. The future balance of these opposing effects is unclear.[161] Climate change has contributed to the expansion of drier climate zones, such as the expansion of deserts in the subtropics.[162] The size and speed of global warming is making abrupt changes in ecosystems more likely.[163] Overall, it is expected that climate change will result in the extinction of many species.[164]
The oceans have heated more slowly than the land, but plants and animals in the ocean have migrated towards the colder poles faster than species on land.[165] Just as on land, heat waves in the ocean occur more frequently due to climate change, harming a wide range of organisms such as corals, kelp, and seabirds.[166] Ocean acidification makes it harder for organisms such as mussels, barnacles and corals to produce shells and skeletons; and heatwaves have bleached coral reefs.[167] Harmful algal blooms enhanced by climate change and eutrophication lower oxygen levels, disrupt food webs and cause great loss of marine life.[168] Coastal ecosystems are under particular stress. Almost half of global wetlands have disappeared due to climate change and other human impacts.[169]
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Humans
The effects of climate change on humans have been detected worldwide. They are mostly due to warming and shifts in precipitation. Impacts can now be observed on all continents and ocean regions,[175] with low-latitude, less developed areas facing the greatest risk.[176] Continued warming has potentially “severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts” for people and ecosystems.[177] The risks are unevenly distributed, but are generally greater for disadvantaged people in developing and developed countries.[178]
Food and health
The WHO has classified climate change as the greatest threat to global health in the 21st century.[179] Extreme weather leads to injury and loss of life,[180] and crop failures to undernutrition.[181] Various infectious diseases are more easily transmitted in a warmer climate, such as dengue fever and malaria.[182] Young children are the most vulnerable to food shortages. Both children and older people are vulnerable to extreme heat.[183] The World Health Organization (WHO) has estimated that between 2030 and 2050, climate change would cause around 250,000 additional deaths per year. They assessed deaths from heat exposure in elderly people, increases in diarrhea, malaria, dengue, coastal flooding, and childhood undernutrition.[184] Over 500,000 more adult deaths are projected yearly by 2050 due to reductions in food availability and quality.[185]
Climate change is affecting food security. It has caused reduction in global yields of maize, wheat, and soybeans between 1981 and 2010.[186] Future warming could further reduce global yields of major crops.[187] Crop production will probably be negatively affected in low-latitude countries, while effects at northern latitudes may be positive or negative.[188] Up to an additional 183 million people worldwide, particularly those with lower incomes, are at risk of hunger as a consequence of these impacts.[189] Climate change also impacts fish populations. Globally, less will be available to be fished.[190] Regions dependent on glacier water, regions that are already dry, and small islands have a higher risk of water stress due to climate change.[191]
Livelihoods
Economic damages due to climate change may be severe and there is a chance of disastrous tail-risk events.[192] Climate change has likely already increased global economic inequality, and this trend is projected to continue.[193] Most of the severe impacts are expected in sub-Saharan Africa and South-East Asia.[194] The World Bank estimates that climate change could drive over 120 million people into poverty by 2030.[195] Current inequalities between men and women, between rich and poor, and between different ethnicities have worsened due to climate variability and climate change.[196] An expert elicitation concluded that the role of climate change in armed conflict has been small compared to factors such as socio-economic inequality and state capabilities, but that future warming will bring increasing risks.[197]
Low-lying islands and coastal communities are threatened by sea level rise, which makes flooding more common. Sometimes, land is permanently lost to the sea.[198] This could lead to statelessness for people in island nations, such as the Maldives and Tuvalu.[199] In some regions, the rise in temperature and humidity may be too severe for humans to adapt to.[200] With worst-case climate change, models project that almost one-third of humanity might live in extremely hot and uninhabitable climates, similar to the current climate found in the Sahara.[201] These factors can drive environmental migration, both within and between countries.[9] More people are expected to be displaced because of sea level rise, extreme weather and conflict from increased competition over natural resources. Climate change may also increase vulnerability, leading to "trapped populations" who are not able to move due to a lack of resources.[202]
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Responses
Mitigation
Climate change can be mitigated by reducing greenhouse gas emissions and by enhancing sinks that absorb greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.[208] In order to limit global warming to less than 1.5 °C with a high likelihood of success, global greenhouse gas emissions needs to be net-zero by 2050, or by 2070 with a 2 °C target.[133] This requires far-reaching, systemic changes on an unprecedented scale in energy, land, cities, transport, buildings, and industry.[209] The United Nations Environment Programme estimates that countries need to triple their pledges under the Paris Agreement within the next decade to limit global warming to 2 °C. An even greater level of reduction is required to meet the 1.5 °C goal.[210] With pledges made under the Agreement as of October 2021, global warming would still have a 66% chance of reaching about 2.7 °C (range: 2.2–3.2 °C) by the end of the century.[13]
Although there is no single pathway to limit global warming to 1.5 or 2 °C,[211] most scenarios and strategies see a major increase in the use of renewable energy in combination with increased energy efficiency measures to generate the needed greenhouse gas reductions.[212] To reduce pressures on ecosystems and enhance their carbon sequestration capabilities, changes would also be necessary in agriculture and forestry,[213] such as preventing deforestation and restoring natural ecosystems by reforestation.[214]
Other approaches to mitigating climate change have a higher level of risk. Scenarios that limit global warming to 1.5 °C typically project the large-scale use of carbon dioxide removal methods over the 21st century.[215] There are concerns, though, about over-reliance on these technologies, and environmental impacts.[216] Solar radiation management (SRM) is also a possible supplement to deep reductions in emissions. However, SRM would raise significant ethical and legal issues, and the risks are poorly understood.[217]
Clean energy
Renewable energy is key to limiting climate change.[219] Fossil fuels accounted for 80% of the world's energy in 2018. The remaining share was split between nuclear power and renewables (including solar and wind power, bioenergy, geothermal energy, and hydropower).[220] That mix is projected to change significantly over the next 30 years.[212] Solar and wind have seen substantial growth and progress over the last few years. Solar panels and onshore wind are the cheapest forms of adding new power generation capacity in most countries.[221] Renewables represented 75% of all new electricity generation installed in 2019, nearly all solar and wind.[222] Meanwhile, nuclear power share remains the same but costs are increasing. Nuclear power generation is now several times more expensive per megawatt-hour than wind and solar.[223]
To achieve carbon neutrality by 2050, renewable energy would become the dominant form of electricity generation, rising to 85% or more by 2050 in some scenarios. The use of electricity for heating and transport, would rise to the point where electricity becomes the largest form of energy.[224] Investment in coal would be eliminated and coal use nearly phased out by 2050.[225]
In transport, emissions can be reduced fast by a switch to electric vehicles.[226] Public transport and active transport (cycling and walking) also produce less CO2.[227] For shipping and flying, low-carbon fuels can be used to reduce emissions.[226] Heating would be increasingly decarbonised with technologies like heat pumps.[228]
There are obstacles to the continued rapid growth of renewables. For solar and wind power, a key challenge is their intermittency and seasonal variability. Traditionally, hydro dams with reservoirs and conventional power plants have been used when variable energy production is low. Intermittency is further countered by expanding battery storage and matching energy demand and supply. Long-distance transmission can smooth variability of renewable output across wider geographic areas.[219] There can be environmental and land use concerns with large solar and wind projects,[229] while bioenergy is often not carbon-neutral and may have negative consequences for food security.[230] Hydropower growth has been slowing and is set to decline further due to concerns about social and environmental impacts.[231]
Low-carbon energy improves human health by minimising climate change. It also has the near-term benefit of reducing air pollution deaths,[232] which were estimated at 7 million annually in 2016.[233] Meeting the Paris Agreement goals that limit warming to a 2 °C increase could save about a million of those lives per year by 2050, whereas limiting global warming to 1.5 °C could save millions and simultaneously increase energy security and reduce poverty.[234]
Energy efficiency
Reducing energy demand is another major aspect of reducing emissions.[235] If less energy is needed, there is more flexibility for clean energy development. It also makes it easier to manage the electricity grid, and minimises carbon-intensive infrastructure development.[236] Major increases in energy efficiency investment will be required to achieve climate goals, comparable to the level of investment in renewable energy.[237] Several COVID-19 related changes in energy use patterns, energy efficiency investments, and funding have made forecasts for this decade more difficult and uncertain.[238]
Strategies to reduce energy demand vary by sector. In transport, passengers and freight can switch to more efficient travel modes, such as buses and trains, or use electric vehicles.[239] Industrial strategies to reduce energy demand include improving heating systems and motors, designing less energy-intensive products, and increasing product lifetimes.[240] In the building sector the focus is on better design of new buildings, and higher levels of energy efficiency in retrofitting.[241] The use of technologies like heat pumps can also increase building energy efficiency.[242]
Agriculture and industry
Agriculture and forestry face a triple challenge of limiting greenhouse gas emissions, preventing the further conversion of forests to agricultural land, and meeting increases in world food demand.[243] A set of actions could reduce agriculture and forestry-based emissions by two thirds from 2010 levels. These include reducing growth in demand for food and other agricultural products, increasing land productivity, protecting and restoring forests, and reducing greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural production.[244]
Steel and cement production, responsible for about 13% of industrial CO2 emissions, present particular challenges. In these industries, carbon-intensive materials such as coke and lime play an integral role in the production, so that reducing CO2 emissions requires research into alternative chemistries.[245]
Carbon sequestration
Natural carbon sinks can be enhanced to sequester significantly larger amounts of CO2 beyond naturally occurring levels.[246] Reforestation and tree planting on non-forest lands are among the most mature sequestration techniques, although the latter raises food security concerns.[247] Soil carbon sequestration and coastal carbon sequestration are less understood options.[248] The feasibility of land-based negative emissions methods for mitigation are uncertain; the IPCC has described mitigation strategies based on them as risky.[249]
Where energy production or CO2-intensive heavy industries continue to produce waste CO2, the gas can be captured and stored instead of released to the atmosphere. Although its current use is limited in scale and expensive,[250] carbon capture and storage (CCS) may be able to play a significant role in limiting CO2 emissions by mid-century.[251] This technique, in combination with bio-energy (BECCS) can result in net negative emissions: CO2 is drawn from the atmosphere.[252] It remains highly uncertain whether carbon dioxide removal techniques, such as BECCS, will be able to play a large role in limiting warming to 1.5 °C. Policy decisions that rely on carbon dioxide removal increase the risk of global warming rising beyond international goals.[253]
Adaptation
Adaptation is "the process of adjustment to current or expected changes in climate and its effects".[254] Without additional mitigation, adaptation cannot avert the risk of "severe, widespread and irreversible" impacts.[255] More severe climate change requires more transformative adaptation, which can be prohibitively expensive.[254] The capacity and potential for humans to adapt is unevenly distributed across different regions and populations, and developing countries generally have less.[256] The first two decades of the 21st century saw an increase in adaptive capacity in most low- and middle-income countries with improved access to basic sanitation and electricity, but progress is slow. Many countries have implemented adaptation policies. However, there is a considerable gap between necessary and available finance.[257]
Adaptation to sea level rise consists of avoiding at-risk areas, learning to live with increased flooding and protection. If that fails, managed retreat may be needed.[258] There are economic barriers for tackling dangerous heat impact. Avoiding strenuous work or having air conditioning is not possible for everybody.[259] In agriculture, adaptation options include a switch to more sustainable diets, diversification, erosion control and genetic improvements for increased tolerance to a changing climate.[260] Insurance allows for risk-sharing, but is often difficult to get for people on lower incomes.[261] Education, migration and early warning systems can reduce climate vulnerability.[262]
Ecosystems adapt to climate change, a process that can be supported by human intervention. By increasing connectivity between ecosystems, species can migrate to more favourable climate conditions. Species can also be introduced to areas acquiring a favorable climate. Protection and restoration of natural and semi-natural areas helps build resilience, making it easier for ecosystems to adapt. Many of the actions that promote adaptation in ecosystems, also help humans adapt via ecosystem-based adaptation. For instance, restoration of natural fire regimes makes catastrophic fires less likely, and reduces human exposure. Giving rivers more space allows for more water storage in the natural system, reducing flood risk. Restored forest acts as a carbon sink, but planting trees in unsuitable regions can exacerbate climate impacts.[263]
There are synergies and trade-offs between adaptation and mitigation. Adaptation often offer short-term benefits, whereas mitigation has longer-term benefits.[264] Increased use of air conditioning allows people to better cope with heat, but increases energy demand. Compact urban development may lead to reduced emissions from transport and construction. At the same time, it may increase the urban heat island effect, leading to higher temperatures and increased exposure.[265] Increased food productivity has large benefits for both adaptation and mitigation.[266]
Policies and politics
Countries that are most vulnerable to climate change have typically been responsible for a small share of global emissions. This raises questions about justice and fairness.[267] Climate change is strongly linked to sustainable development. Limiting global warming makes it easier to achieve sustainable development goals, such as eradicating poverty and reducing inequalities. The connection is recognised in Sustainable Development Goal 13 which is to "[t]ake urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts".[268] The goals on food, clean water and ecosystem protection have synergies with climate mitigation.[269]
The geopolitics of climate change is complex. It has often been framed as a free-rider problem, in which all countries benefit from mitigation done by other countries, but individual countries would lose from switching to a low-carbon economy themselves. This framing has been challenged. For instance, the benefits of a coal phase-out to public health and local environments exceed the costs in almost all regions.[270] Furthermore, net importers of fossil fuels win economically from switching to clean energy, causing net exporters to face stranded assets: fossil fuels they cannot sell.[271]
Policy options
A wide range of policies, regulations, and laws are being used to reduce emissions. As of 2019, carbon pricing covers about 20% of global greenhouse gas emissions.[272] Carbon can be priced with carbon taxes and emissions trading systems.[273] Direct global fossil fuel subsidies reached $319 billion in 2017, and $5.2 trillion when indirect costs such as air pollution are priced in.[274] Ending these can cause a 28% reduction in global carbon emissions and a 46% reduction in air pollution deaths.[275] Subsidies could be used to support the transition to clean energy instead.[276] More direct methods to reduce greenhouse gases include vehicle efficiency standards, renewable fuel standards, and air pollution regulations on heavy industry.[277] Several countries require utilities to increase the share of renewables in power production.[278]
Policy designed through the lens of climate justice tries to address human rights issues and social inequality. For instance, wealthy nations responsible for the largest share of emissions would have to pay poorer countries to adapt.[279] As the use of fossil fuels is reduced, jobs in the sector are being lost. To achieve a just transition, these people would need to be retrained for other jobs. Communities with many fossil fuel workers would need additional investments.[280]
International climate agreements
Nearly all countries in the world are parties to the 1994 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).[282] The goal of the UNFCCC is to prevent dangerous human interference with the climate system.[283] As stated in the convention, this requires that greenhouse gas concentrations are stabilised in the atmosphere at a level where ecosystems can adapt naturally to climate change, food production is not threatened, and economic development can be sustained.[284] The UNFCCC does not itself restrict emissions but rather provides a framework for protocols that do. Global emissions have risen since the UNFCCC was signed.[285] Its yearly conferences are the stage of global negotiations.[286]
The 1997 Kyoto Protocol extended the UNFCCC and included legally binding commitments for most developed countries to limit their emissions.[287] During the negotiations, the G77 (representing developing countries) pushed for a mandate requiring developed countries to "[take] the lead" in reducing their emissions,[288] since developed countries contributed most to the accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Per-capita emissions were also still relatively low in developing countries and developing countries would need to emit more to meet their development needs.[289]
The 2009 Copenhagen Accord has been widely portrayed as disappointing because of its low goals, and was rejected by poorer nations including the G77.[290] Associated parties aimed to limit the global temperature rise to below 2 °C.[291] The Accord set the goal of sending $100 billion per year to developing countries for mitigation and adaptation by 2020, and proposed the founding of the Green Climate Fund.[292] As of 2020, the fund has failed to reach its expected target, and risks a shrinkage in its funding.[293]
In 2015 all UN countries negotiated the Paris Agreement, which aims to keep global warming well below 2.0 °C and contains an aspirational goal of keeping warming under 1.5 °C.[294] The agreement replaced the Kyoto Protocol. Unlike Kyoto, no binding emission targets were set in the Paris Agreement. Instead, a set of procedures was made binding. Countries have to regularly set ever more ambitious goals and reevaluate these goals every five years.[295] The Paris Agreement restated that developing countries must be financially supported.[296] As of October 2021, 194 states and the European Union have signed the treaty and 191 states and the EU have ratified or acceded to the agreement.[297]
The 1987 Montreal Protocol, an international agreement to stop emitting ozone-depleting gases, may have been more effective at curbing greenhouse gas emissions than the Kyoto Protocol specifically designed to do so.[298] The 2016 Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol aims to reduce the emissions of hydrofluorocarbons, a group of powerful greenhouse gases which served as a replacement for banned ozone-depleting gases. This made the Montreal Protocol a stronger agreement against climate change.[299]
National responses
In 2019, the United Kingdom parliament became the first national government to declare a climate emergency.[300] Other countries and jurisdictions followed suit.[301] That same year, the European Parliament declared a "climate and environmental emergency".[302] The European Commission presented its European Green Deal with the goal of making the EU carbon-neutral by 2050.[303] Major countries in Asia have made similar pledges: South Korea and Japan have committed to become carbon-neutral by 2050, and China by 2060.[304] In 2021, the European Commission released its “Fit for 55” legislation package, which contains guidelines for the car industry; all new cars on the European market must be zero-emission vehicles from 2035.[305] While India has strong incentives for renewables, it also plans a significant expansion of coal in the country.[306]
As of 2021, based on information from 48 national climate plans, which represent 40% of the parties to the Paris Agreement, estimated total greenhouse gas emissions will be 0.5% lower compared to 2010 levels, below the 45% or 25% reduction goals to limit global warming to 1.5 °C or 2 °C, respectively.[307]
Scientific consensus and society
Scientific consensus
There is a near-complete scientific consensus that the climate is warming and that this is caused by human activities. Agreement in recent literature reached over 99%.[312][309] No scientific body of national or international standing disagrees with this view.[313] Consensus has further developed that some form of action should be taken to protect people against the impacts of climate change. National science academies have called on world leaders to cut global emissions.[314]
Scientific discussion takes place in journal articles that are peer-reviewed. Scientists assess these every few years in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports.[315] The 2021 IPCC Assessment Report stated that it is "unequivocal" that climate change is caused by humans.[309]
Denial and misinformation
Public debate about climate change has been strongly affected by climate change denial and misinformation, which originated in the United States and has since spread to other countries, particularly Canada and Australia. The actors behind climate change denial form a well-funded and relatively coordinated coalition of fossil fuel companies, industry groups, conservative think tanks, and contrarian scientists.[317] Like the tobacco industry, the main strategy of these groups has been to manufacture doubt about scientific data and results.[318] Many who deny, dismiss, or hold unwarranted doubt about the scientific consensus on anthropogenic climate change are labelled as "climate change skeptics", which several scientists have noted is a misnomer.[319]
There are different variants of climate denial: some deny that warming takes place at all, some acknowledge warming but attribute it to natural influences, and some minimise the negative impacts of climate change.[320] Manufacturing uncertainty about the science later developed into a manufactured controversy: creating the belief that there is significant uncertainty about climate change within the scientific community in order to delay policy changes.[321] Strategies to promote these ideas include criticism of scientific institutions,[322] and questioning the motives of individual scientists.[320] An echo chamber of climate-denying blogs and media has further fomented misunderstanding of climate change.[323]
Public awareness and opinion
Climate change came to international public attention in the late 1980s.[324] Due to media coverage in the early 1990s, people often confused climate change with other environmental issues like ozone depletion.[325] In popular culture, the climate fiction movie The Day After Tomorrow (2004) and the Al Gore documentary An Inconvenient Truth (2006) focused on climate change.[324]
Significant regional, gender, age and political differences exist in both public concern for, and understanding of, climate change. More highly educated people, and in some countries, women and younger people, were more likely to see climate change as a serious threat.[326] Partisan gaps also exist in many countries,[327] and countries with high CO2 emissions tend to be less concerned.[328] Views on causes of climate change vary widely between countries.[329] Concern has increased over time,[327] to the point where in 2021 a majority of citizens in many countries express a high level of worry about climate change, or view it as a global emergency.[330] Higher levels of worry are associated with stronger public support for policies that address climate change.[331]
Protests and lawsuits
Climate protests have risen in popularity in the 2010s. These protests demand that political leaders take action to prevent climate change. They can take the form of public demonstrations, fossil fuel divestment, lawsuits and other activities.[332] Prominent demonstrations include the School Strike for Climate. In this initiative, young people across the globe have been protesting since 2018 by skipping school on Fridays, inspired by Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg.[333] Mass civil disobedience actions by groups like Extinction Rebellion have protested by disrupting roads and public transport.[334] Litigation is increasingly used as a tool to strengthen climate action from public institutions and companies. Activists also initiate lawsuits which target governments and demand that they take ambitious action or enforce existing laws on climate change.[335] Lawsuits against fossil-fuel companies generally seek compensation for loss and damage.[336]
Discovery
In the 1820s, Joseph Fourier proposed the greenhouse effect to explain why Earth's temperature was higher than the sun's energy alone could explain. Earth's atmosphere is transparent to sunlight, so sunlight reaches the surface where it is converted to heat. However, the atmosphere is not transparent to heat radiating from the surface, and captures some of that heat which warms the planet.[337] In 1856 Eunice Newton Foote demonstrated that the warming effect of the sun is greater for air with water vapour than for dry air, and the effect is even greater with carbon dioxide. She concluded that "An atmosphere of that gas would give to our earth a high temperature..."[338][339] Starting in 1859,[340] John Tyndall established that nitrogen and oxygen—together totalling 99% of dry air—are transparent to radiated heat. However, water vapour and some gases (in particular methane and carbon dioxide) absorb radiated heat and re-radiate that heat within the atmosphere. Tyndall proposed that changes in the concentrations of these gases may have caused climatic changes in the past, including ice ages.[341]
Svante Arrhenius noted that water vapour in air continuously varied, but the CO2 concentration in air was influenced by long-term geological processes. At the end of an ice age, warming from increased CO2 levels would increase the amount of water vapour, amplifying warming in a feedback loop. In 1896, he published the first climate model of its kind, showing that halving of CO2 levels could have produced the drop in temperature initiating the ice age. Arrhenius calculated the temperature increase expected from doubling CO2 to be around 5–6 °C.[342] Other scientists were initially sceptical and believed the greenhouse effect to be saturated so that adding more CO2 would make no difference. They thought climate would be self-regulating.[343] From 1938 onwards Guy Stewart Callendar published evidence that climate was warming and CO2 levels rising,[344] but his calculations met the same objections.[343]
In the 1950s, Gilbert Plass created a detailed computer model that included different atmospheric layers and the infrared spectrum. This model predicted that increasing CO2 levels would cause warming. Around the same time, Hans Suess found evidence that CO2 levels had been rising, and Roger Revelle showed that the oceans would not absorb the increase. The two scientists subsequently helped Charles Keeling to begin a record of continued increase, which has been termed the "Keeling Curve".[343] Scientists alerted the public,[345] and the dangers were highlighted at James Hansen's 1988 Congressional testimony.[21] The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, set up in 1988 to provide formal advice to the world's governments, spurred interdisciplinary research.[346]
See also
- 2020s in environmental history
- Anthropocene – proposed new geological time interval in which humans are having significant geological impact
- Global cooling – minority view held by scientists in the 1970s that imminent cooling of the Earth would take place
References
Explanatory notes
Notes
- ↑ IPCC AR6 WG1 2021
- ↑ IPCC SR15 Ch1 2018, p. 54: These global-level rates of human-driven change far exceed the rates of change driven by geophysical or biosphere forces that have altered the Earth System trajectory in the past…
- 1 2 Our World in Data, 18 September 2020
- ↑ IPCC AR6 WG1 Technical Summary 2021, p. 59: The combined effect of all climate feedback processes is to amplify the climate response to forcing...
- ↑ IPCC SRCCL 2019, p. 7: Since the pre-industrial period, the land surface air temperature has risen nearly twice as much as the global average temperature (high confidence). Climate change... contributed to desertification and land degradation in many regions (high confidence).; IPCC SRCCL 2019, p. 45: Climate change is playing an increasing role in determining wildfire regimes alongside human activity (medium confidence), with future climate variability expected to enhance the risk and severity of wildfires in many biomes such as tropical rainforests (high confidence).
- ↑ IPCC SROCC 2019, p. 16: Over the last decades, global warming has led to widespread shrinking of the cryosphere, with mass loss from ice sheets and glaciers (very high confidence), reductions in snow cover (high confidence) and Arctic sea ice extent and thickness (very high confidence), and increased permafrost temperature (very high confidence).
- 1 2 USGCRP Chapter 9 2017, p. 260.
- ↑ EPA (19 January 2017). "Climate Impacts on Ecosystems". Archived from the original on 27 January 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
Mountain and arctic ecosystems and species are particularly sensitive to climate change... As ocean temperatures warm and the acidity of the ocean increases, bleaching and coral die-offs are likely to become more frequent.
- 1 2 Cattaneo et al. 2019; UN Environment, 25 October 2018.
- ↑ IPCC AR5 SYR 2014, pp. 13–16; WHO, Nov 2015: "Climate change is the greatest threat to global health in the 21st century. Health professionals have a duty of care to current and future generations. You are on the front line in protecting people from climate impacts – from more heat-waves and other extreme weather events; from outbreaks of infectious diseases such as malaria, dengue and cholera; from the effects of malnutrition; as well as treating people that are affected by cancer, respiratory, cardiovascular and other non-communicable diseases caused by environmental pollution."
- ↑ IPCC SR15 Ch1 2018, p. 64: Sustained net zero anthropogenic emissions of CO2 and declining net anthropogenic non-CO2 radiative forcing over a multi-decade period would halt anthropogenic global warming over that period, although it would not halt sea level rise or many other aspects of climate system adjustment.
- ↑ IPCC AR6 WG1 Technical Summary 2021, p. 71
- 1 2 United Nations Environment Programme 2021, p. 36: "A continuation of the effort implied by the latest unconditional NDCs and announced pledges is at present estimated to result in warming of about 2.7 °C (range: 2.2–3.2 °C) with a 66 per cent chance."
- ↑ IPCC SR15 Ch2 2018, pp. 95–96: In model pathways with no or limited overshoot of 1.5 °C, global net anthropogenic CO2 emissions decline by about 45% from 2010 levels by 2030 (40–60% interquartile range), reaching net zero around 2050 (2045–2055 interquartile range); IPCC SR15 2018, p. 17, SPM C.3:All pathways that limit global warming to 1.5 °C with limited or no overshoot project the use of carbon dioxide removal (CDR) on the order of 100–1000 GtCO2 over the 21st century. CDR would be used to compensate for residual emissions and, in most cases, achieve net negative emissions to return global warming to 1.5 °C following a peak (high confidence). CDR deployment of several hundreds of GtCO2 is subject to multiple feasibility and sustainability constraints (high confidence).; Rogelj et al. 2015; Hilaire et al. 2019
- ↑ United Nations Environment Programme 2019, p. xxiii, Table ES.3; Teske, ed. 2019, p. xxvii, Fig.5.
- ↑ United Nations Environment Programme 2019, Table ES.3 & p. 49; NREL 2017, pp. vi, 12
- ↑ IPCC SRCCL Summary for Policymakers 2019, p. 18
- ↑ IPCC AR5 SYR 2014, p. 17, SPM 3.2
- ↑ Trenberth & Fasullo 2016
- ↑ NASA, 5 December 2008.
- 1 2 Weart "The Public and Climate Change: The Summer of 1988", "News reporters gave only a little attention ...".
- ↑ Joo et al. 2015.
- ↑ NOAA, 17 June 2015: "when scientists or public leaders talk about global warming these days, they almost always mean human-caused warming"; IPCC AR5 SYR Glossary 2014, p. 120: "Climate change refers to a change in the state of the climate that can be identified (e.g., by using statistical tests) by changes in the mean and/or the variability of its properties and that persists for an extended period, typically decades or longer. Climate change may be due to natural internal processes or external forcings such as modulations of the solar cycles, volcanic eruptions and persistent anthropogenic changes in the composition of the atmosphere or in land use."
- ↑ NASA, 7 July 2020; Shaftel 2016: " 'Climate change' and 'global warming' are often used interchangeably but have distinct meanings. ... Global warming refers to the upward temperature trend across the entire Earth since the early 20th century ... Climate change refers to a broad range of global phenomena ...[which] include the increased temperature trends described by global warming."; Associated Press, 22 September 2015: "The terms global warming and climate change can be used interchangeably. Climate change is more accurate scientifically to describe the various effects of greenhouse gases on the world because it includes extreme weather, storms and changes in rainfall patterns, ocean acidification and sea level.".
- ↑ Hodder & Martin 2009; BBC Science Focus Magazine, 3 February 2020
- ↑ The Guardian, 17 May 2019; BBC Science Focus Magazine, 3 February 2020
- ↑ USA Today, 21 November 2019.
- ↑ Oxford Languages 2019
- ↑ Neukom et al. 2019.
- ↑ "Global Annual Mean Surface Air Temperature Change". NASA. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
- ↑ EPA 2016: The U.S. Global Change Research Program, the National Academy of Sciences, and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) have each independently concluded that warming of the climate system in recent decades is "unequivocal". This conclusion is not drawn from any one source of data but is based on multiple lines of evidence, including three worldwide temperature datasets showing nearly identical warming trends as well as numerous other independent indicators of global warming (e.g. rising sea levels, shrinking Arctic sea ice).
- ↑ IPCC AR6 WG1 Summary for Policymakers 2021, p. SPM-5
- ↑ IPCC SR15 Ch1 2018, p. 81.
- ↑ WMO 2021, p. 6.
- ↑ IPCC AR5 WG1 Ch2 2013, p. 162.
- ↑ IPCC SR15 Ch1 2018, p. 57: This report adopts the 51-year reference period, 1850–1900 inclusive, assessed as an approximation of pre-industrial levels in AR5 ... Temperatures rose by 0.0 °C–0.2 °C from 1720–1800 to 1850–1900; Hawkins et al. 2017, p. 1844
- ↑ IPCC AR5 WG1 Summary for Policymakers 2013, pp. 4–5: "Global-scale observations from the instrumental era began in the mid-19th century for temperature and other variables ... the period 1880 to 2012 ... multiple independently produced datasets exist."
- ↑ IPCC AR5 WG1 Ch5 2013, p. 386; Neukom et al. 2019
- ↑ IPCC AR5 WG1 Ch5 2013, pp. 389, 399–400: "The PETM [around 55.5–55.3 million years ago] was marked by ... global warming of 4 °C to 7 °C ... Deglacial global warming occurred in two main steps from 17.5 to 14.5 ka [thousand years ago] and 13.0 to 10.0 ka."
- ↑ IPCC SR15 Ch1 2018, p. 54.
- ↑ Kennedy et al. 2010, p. S26. Figure 2.5.
- ↑ Loeb, Norman G.; Johnson, Gregory C.; Thorsen, Tyler J.; Lyman, John M.; Rose, Fred G.; Kato, Seiji (2021). "Satellite and Ocean Data Reveal Marked Increase in Earth's Heating Rate". Geophysical Research Letters. American Geophysical Union (AGU). 48 (13). Bibcode:2021GeoRL..4893047L. doi:10.1029/2021gl093047. ISSN 0094-8276. S2CID 236233508.
- ↑ Kennedy et al. 2010, pp. S26, S59–S60; USGCRP Chapter 1 2017, p. 35.
- ↑ IPCC AR4 WG2 Ch1 2007, p. 99, Sec. 1.3.5.1
- ↑ "Global Warming". NASA JPL. 3 June 2010. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
Satellite measurements show warming in the troposphere but cooling in the stratosphere. This vertical pattern is consistent with global warming due to increasing greenhouse gases but inconsistent with warming from natural causes.
- ↑ IPCC SRCCL Summary for Policymakers 2019, p. 7
- ↑ Sutton, Dong & Gregory 2007.
- ↑ "Climate Change: Ocean Heat Content". NOAA. 2018. Archived from the original on 12 February 2019. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
- ↑ IPCC AR5 WG1 Ch3 2013, p. 257: "Ocean warming dominates the global energy change inventory. Warming of the ocean accounts for about 93% of the increase in the Earth's energy inventory between 1971 and 2010 (high confidence), with warming of the upper (0 to 700 m) ocean accounting for about 64% of the total.
- ↑ von Schuckman, K.; Cheng, L.; Palmer, M. D.; Hansen, J.; et al. (7 September 2020). "Heat stored in the Earth system: where does the energy go?". Earth System Science Data. 12 (3): 2013–2041. Bibcode:2020ESSD...12.2013V. doi:10.5194/essd-12-2013-2020.
- ↑ NOAA, 10 July 2011.
- ↑ United States Environmental Protection Agency 2016, p. 5: "Black carbon that is deposited on snow and ice darkens those surfaces and decreases their reflectivity (albedo). This is known as the snow/ice albedo effect. This effect results in the increased absorption of radiation that accelerates melting."
- ↑ IPCC AR5 WG1 Ch12 2013, p. 1062; IPCC SROCC Ch3 2019, p. 212.
- ↑ NASA, 12 September 2018.
- ↑ Delworth & Zeng 2012, p. 5; Franzke et al. 2020
- ↑ National Research Council 2012, p. 9
- ↑ IPCC AR5 WG1 Ch10 2013, p. 916.
- ↑ Knutson 2017, p. 443; IPCC AR5 WG1 Ch10 2013, pp. 875–876
- 1 2 USGCRP 2009, p. 20.
- ↑ IPCC AR5 WG1 Summary for Policymakers 2013, pp. 13–14
- ↑ NASA. "The Causes of Climate Change". Climate Change: Vital Signs of the Planet. Archived from the original on 8 May 2019. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
- ↑ IPCC AR4 WG1 Ch1 2007, FAQ1.1: "To emit 240 W m−2, a surface would have to have a temperature of around −19 °C. This is much colder than the conditions that actually exist at the Earth's surface (the global mean surface temperature is about 14 °C).
- ↑ ACS. "What Is the Greenhouse Effect?". Archived from the original on 26 May 2019. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
- ↑ Ozone acts as a greenhouse gas in the lowest layer of the atmosphere, the troposphere (as opposed to the stratospheric ozone layer). Wang, Shugart & Lerdau 2017
- ↑ Schmidt et al. 2010; USGCRP Climate Science Supplement 2014, p. 742
- ↑ The Guardian, 19 February 2020.
- ↑ WMO 2021, p. 8.
- ↑ IPCC AR6 WG1 Technical Summary 2021, p. TS-35.
- ↑ Olivier & Peters 2019, pp. 14, 16–17, 23.
- ↑ Olivier & Peters 2019, p. 17; Our World in Data, 18 September 2020; EPA 2020: Greenhouse gas emissions from industry primarily come from burning fossil fuels for energy, as well as greenhouse gas emissions from certain chemical reactions necessary to produce goods from raw materials; "Redox, extraction of iron and transition metals".
Hot air (oxygen) reacts with the coke (carbon) to produce carbon dioxide and heat energy to heat up the furnace. Removing impurities: The calcium carbonate in the limestone thermally decomposes to form calcium oxide. calcium carbonate → calcium oxide + carbon dioxide
; Kvande 2014: Carbon dioxide gas is formed at the anode, as the carbon anode is consumed upon reaction of carbon with the oxygen ions from the alumina (Al2O3). Formation of carbon dioxide is unavoidable as long as carbon anodes are used, and it is of great concern because CO2 is a greenhouse gas - ↑ EPA 2020; Global Methane Initiative 2020: Estimated Global Anthropogenic Methane Emissions by Source, 2020: Enteric fermentation (27%), Manure Management (3%), Coal Mining (9%), Municipal Solid Waste (11%), Oil & Gas (24%), Wastewater (7%), Rice Cultivation (7%)
- ↑ EPA 2019: Agricultural activities, such as fertilizer use, are the primary source of N2O emissions; Davidson 2009: 2.0% of manure nitrogen and 2.5% of fertilizer nitrogen was converted to nitrous oxide between 1860 and 2005; these percentage contributions explain the entire pattern of increasing nitrous oxide concentrations over this period
- ↑ IPCC SRCCL Summary for Policymakers 2019, p. 10
- ↑ IPCC SROCC Ch5 2019, p. 450.
- ↑ Haywood 2016, p. 456; McNeill 2017; Samset et al. 2018.
- ↑ IPCC AR5 WG1 Ch2 2013, p. 183.
- ↑ He et al. 2018; Storelvmo et al. 2016
- ↑ Wild et al. 2005; Storelvmo et al. 2016; Samset et al. 2018.
- ↑ Twomey 1977.
- ↑ Albrecht 1989.
- 1 2 3 USGCRP Chapter 2 2017, p. 78.
- ↑ Ramanathan & Carmichael 2008; RIVM 2016.
- ↑ Sand et al. 2015
- ↑ World Resources Institute, 31 March 2021
- ↑ Ritchie & Roser 2018
- ↑ The Sustainability Consortium, 13 September 2018; UN FAO 2016, p. 18.
- ↑ Curtis et al. 2018
- 1 2 World Resources Institute, 8 December 2019
- ↑ IPCC SRCCL Ch2 2019, p. 172: "The global biophysical cooling alone has been estimated by a larger range of climate models and is −0.10 ± 0.14 °C; it ranges from −0.57 °C to +0.06°C ... This cooling is essentially dominated by increases in surface albedo: historical land cover changes have generally led to a dominant brightening of land"
- ↑ Schmidt, Shindell & Tsigaridis 2014; Fyfe et al. 2016.
- ↑ National Research Council 2008, p. 6
- ↑ "Is the Sun causing global warming?". Climate Change: Vital Signs of the Planet. Archived from the original on 5 May 2019. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
- ↑ IPCC AR4 WG1 Ch9 2007, pp. 702–703; Randel et al. 2009.
- ↑ USGCRP Chapter 2 2017, p. 79
- ↑ Fischer & Aiuppa 2020.
- ↑ "Thermodynamics: Albedo". NSIDC. Archived from the original on 11 October 2017. Retrieved 10 October 2017.
- ↑ "The study of Earth as an integrated system". Vitals Signs of the Planet. Earth Science Communications Team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory / California Institute of Technology. 2013. Archived from the original on 26 February 2019.
- 1 2 USGCRP Chapter 2 2017, pp. 89–91.
- ↑ IPCC AR6 WG1 Technical Summary 2021, p. 58: The net effect of changes in clouds in response to global warming is to amplify human-induced warming, that is, the net cloud feedback is positive (high confidence)
- ↑ USGCRP Chapter 2 2017, pp. 89–90.
- ↑ IPCC AR5 WG1 2013, p. 14
- ↑ Wolff et al. 2015: "the nature and magnitude of these feedbacks are the principal cause of uncertainty in the response of Earth's climate (over multi-decadal and longer periods) to a particular emissions scenario or greenhouse gas concentration pathway."
- ↑ Williams, Ceppi & Katavouta 2020.
- ↑ IPCC AR6 WG1 Technical Summary 2021, p. 58,59: clouds remain the largest contribution to overall uncertainty in climate feedbacks
- ↑ NASA, 28 May 2013.
- ↑ Cohen et al. 2014.
- 1 2 Turetsky et al. 2019
- ↑ Dean et al. 2018.
- ↑ IPCC AR6 WG1 Technical Summary 2021, p. 58: Feedback processes are expected to become more positive overall (more amplifying of global surface temperature changes) on multi-decadal time scales as the spatial pattern of surface warming evolves and global surface temperature increases.
- ↑ NASA, 16 June 2011: "So far, land plants and the ocean have taken up about 55 percent of the extra carbon people have put into the atmosphere while about 45 percent has stayed in the atmosphere. Eventually, the land and oceans will take up most of the extra carbon dioxide, but as much as 20 percent may remain in the atmosphere for many thousands of years."
- ↑ IPCC SRCCL Ch2 2019, pp. 133, 144.
- ↑ Melillo et al. 2017: Our first-order estimate of a warming-induced loss of 190 Pg of soil carbon over the 21st century is equivalent to the past two decades of carbon emissions from fossil fuel burning.
- ↑ USGCRP Chapter 2 2017, pp. 93–95.
- ↑ IPCC AR6 WG1 Technical Summary 2021, p. TS-122, Box TS.5, Figure 1
- ↑ IPCC AR5 SYR Glossary 2014, p. 120.
- ↑ Wolff et al. 2015
- ↑ Carbon Brief, 15 January 2018, "Who does climate modelling around the world?"
- ↑ Carbon Brief, 15 January 2018, "What are the different types of climate models?"
- ↑ Carbon Brief, 15 January 2018, "What is a climate model?"
- ↑ IPCC AR4 WG1 Ch8 2007, FAQ 8.1.
- ↑ Stroeve et al. 2007; National Geographic, 13 August 2019
- ↑ Liepert & Previdi 2009.
- ↑ Rahmstorf et al. 2007; Mitchum et al. 2018
- ↑ USGCRP Chapter 15 2017.
- ↑ Carbon Brief, 15 January 2018, "What are the inputs and outputs for a climate model?"
- ↑ Riahi et al. 2017; Carbon Brief, 19 April 2018.
- ↑ Matthews et al. 2009
- ↑ Carbon Brief, 19 April 2018; Meinshausen 2019, p. 462.
- ↑ IPCC AR6 WG1 Summary for Policymakers 2021, p. SPM-17
- ↑ IPCC AR6 WG1 Technical Summary 2021, p. TS-30.
- ↑ Rogelj et al. 2019
- ↑ IPCC SR15 Summary for Policymakers 2018, p. 12.
- 1 2 IPCC SR15 Summary for Policymakers 2018, p. 12
- ↑ IPCC AR5 WG3 Ch5 2014, pp. 379–380.
- ↑ Hansen et al. 2016; Smithsonian, 26 June 2016.
- ↑ USGCRP Chapter 15 2017, p. 415.
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{{cite web}}
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External links
Library resources about Climate change |
- Met Office: Climate Guide – UK National Weather Service
- Global Climate Change Indicators – NOAA
- Result of total melting of Polar regions on World – National Geographic
- Up-to-the-second assessment of human-induced global warming since the second half of the 19th century – Oxford University