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Reduced Work Hours as a Means of Slowing Climate Change
Reduced Work Hours as a Means of Slowing Climate Change

... The analysis uses four “illustrative scenarios” from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), and software from the Model for the Assessment of Greenhouse-gas Induced Climate Change to estimate the impact of a reduction in work hours. As would be expected, the amount of global warming t ...
Why society needs to change - Tom Barker - Support CAT
Why society needs to change - Tom Barker - Support CAT

... • Effective responses to climate change entail parallel processes of decay and the radical unmaking of unsustainability (Geels 2008); • We need to simultaneously make new and erode old ways of life (Shove 2010); • Transformation is a change in the fundamental attributes of natural & human systems. I ...
Climate-Change Risks & Opportunities: Recent Developments, Available Strategies, New Technologies JOHN P. HOLDREN
Climate-Change Risks & Opportunities: Recent Developments, Available Strategies, New Technologies JOHN P. HOLDREN

... CO2-fertilization effect; concluded that some regions would do better and some worse for moderate increases in Tavg, transitioning to net loss globally under larger increases. – IPCC report did not model the increase in pest & pathogen problems expected in a warmer, wetter world, which would make th ...
The Effects of Climate Change on Food Borne Diseases and Nutrition
The Effects of Climate Change on Food Borne Diseases and Nutrition

... ES 366A: The Environment and Human Health, Environmental Studies Program, Colby College, Waterville ME ...
Climate Change Impacts in Hawaii and US
Climate Change Impacts in Hawaii and US

... climate change. The amount of land that is flat enough for large-scale settlement, development, and agriculture is limited, however, resulting in high concentrations of population, infrastructure, and commercial development in low-lying coastal areas. Thus, communities on high islands and low island ...
Chicago Field Museum Climate Exhibit
Chicago Field Museum Climate Exhibit

... is passed many businesses will be legally required to purchase carbon offsets and the Chicago Climate Exchange will presumably make a lot of money. Cap and trade is a tax on fossil fuel energy. It is also a device to give politicians the power to reward their friends and punish their enemies. Real ...
lsce_cp_en_v2accept (909 Ko)
lsce_cp_en_v2accept (909 Ko)

... Atmospheric methane concentrations are rising faster since 2007. An international group of researchers led by LSCE (CEA-CNRS-UVSQ) has published a thorough budget of methane sources and sinks1 over the last decade in the Earth System Science Data (ESSD) journal, complemented by en editorial in Envir ...
Template - Agriculture v11.indd - Business for Social Responsibility
Template - Agriculture v11.indd - Business for Social Responsibility

... continue as temperatures rise further. Crops affected include staples such as wheat, maize and rice. Climate change is projected to increase price volatility for agricultural commodities, and reduce food quality. Farmers can adapt to some changes, but there is a limit to what can be managed. Adaptiv ...
PredicHng hydrologic sensiHviHes to climate and land cover
PredicHng hydrologic sensiHviHes to climate and land cover

... … a more comprehensive and … systematic understanding of continental water dynamics … ...
Green surprise? How terrestrial ecosystems could affect earth`s climate
Green surprise? How terrestrial ecosystems could affect earth`s climate

... trial biosphere (Rayner et al. 1999; atmosphere. Currently, the terrestrial biosphere is a net sink of atmospheric CO2. Bousquet et al. 2000; Prentice et al. Variations in climate and atmospheric chemistry, however, could alter this process. The terrestrial biosphere absorbs CO2 through photosynthes ...
PDF: Printable Press Release
PDF: Printable Press Release

... Researchers brave icy waters to study Arctic food web VIMS team studies nutrient inputs in light of changing climate (January 10, 2011) For thousands of years, Inupiat Eskimos have relied on the bounty of nearby coastal waters for their survival along Alaska’s far northern shoreline. Professor Debor ...
Environment and Development
Environment and Development

... – Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), – Global Environment Facility (GEF), and – Green Climate Fund (GCF). • These initiatives currently constitute a substantial share of the global response to climate change, particularly with respect to mitigation ...
The Impact of Global Warming on North Carolina
The Impact of Global Warming on North Carolina

... estate, insurance, and other economic sectors. Global warming are caused by environmental changes and weather processes. Global atmospheric circulation is influenced by seasonal variations of heat on earth. The Mountains and Piedmont generally experience lower temperatures while the Coast (Figure 2) ...
Teaching material - Climate Change
Teaching material - Climate Change

... If you’ve ever been inside a greenhouse (also called a glasshouse or hothouse), you probably noticed that it’s a lot warmer inside even without a heater. It’s like on a sunny day in summer when you sit inside a car with the air conditioning turned off! Like a greenhouse, it gets so warm inside the c ...
06-manton.pps2011-07-12 00:584.1 MB - Asia
06-manton.pps2011-07-12 00:584.1 MB - Asia

... CSIRO Cubic Conformal Atmospheric Model – stretched grid ...
Global Circulation Models – the basis for climate change science
Global Circulation Models – the basis for climate change science

... the atmosphere, and as many as 30 layers in the ocean. Contemporary AOGCMs have a horizontal resolution of between 250km and 600km. For local planning, this is a very coarse scale, and the underlying topography is poorly represented. However, taken over the whole globe, this resolution results in an ...
The Climate Change Challenge for British Woodland
The Climate Change Challenge for British Woodland

... scenarios from 2002 as part of UKCP09, in order to predict the climate change effects from low, medium and high greenhouse gas emission forecasts produced by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The 2009 scenarios predict that all areas of the UK will get warmer, and the warming will be gr ...
Code Black: A Campaign to Move from Coal to Renewables
Code Black: A Campaign to Move from Coal to Renewables

... Counter Lies & Distortions-There is NO Such Thing As Clean Coal! • Unless, if/until we are able to capture the CO2 from the burning of coal, our use of it will continue to drive up global warming emissions. • Given the weight of scientific & public health evidence, … moving ahead with plans to expa ...
A geophysiologist`s thoughts on geoengineering
A geophysiologist`s thoughts on geoengineering

... houses. In between are metastable periods such as the present interglacial. The best known hot house happened 55 Myr ago at the beginning of the Eocene period (Tripati & Elderfield 2005; Higgins & Schrag 2006). In that event, between one and two terratons of carbon dioxide were released into the air ...
Title: Forest/Environment
Title: Forest/Environment

... Climate change is not a projection ► Many climate impacts are observed today, also in Europe ► Europe has warmed (+ 1°C) faster than global average (almost 0,8°C) ► Global mean temperatures continue to rise. Rates of surface warming increased since mid-1970s ► The 1990-1999 decade has been the warm ...
ES Digest Climate Change News_2011.02.04
ES Digest Climate Change News_2011.02.04

... power projects and compete more effectively for business in this emerging global industry. ‘Global Clean Power: A $2.3 Trillion Opportunity’ examined projected private investment in wind, solar, biomass/energy from waste, small hydro, geothermal and marine energy projects. The underlying data for th ...
Climate change declared public enemy No. 1
Climate change declared public enemy No. 1

... billion account for 1% of world consumption and the billion richest consume 72%, climate  change is the one trend "which will determine whether or not we can deliver on our  ambitions."   ...
How Do Volcanic Eruptions Affect Climate and Our Ability
How Do Volcanic Eruptions Affect Climate and Our Ability

... to space, preventing its energy from reaching the Earth’s surface, thus cooling it, along with the lower atmosphere. These upper atmospheric sulphuric acid clouds also locally absorb energy from the Sun, the Earth and the lower atmosphere, which heats the upper atmosphere (see FAQ 11.2, Figure 1). I ...
PPT 5.1MB - Climate Science Program
PPT 5.1MB - Climate Science Program

... Ames, IA 50011 ...
Folie 1 - Hans von Storch
Folie 1 - Hans von Storch

... been put forward already in the 18th century by Benjamin Franklin, who envisaged a northward diversion of the Gulf Stream as a powerful weapon against the British Empire. A perceived attack using climate as a weapon is a purported Soviet plan in the 1950s to build a „jetty 50 miles or more long out ...
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Global warming



Global warming and climate change are terms for the observed century-scale rise in the average temperature of the Earth's climate system and its related effects.Multiple lines of scientific evidence show that the climate system is warming. Although the increase of near-surface atmospheric temperature is the measure of global warming often reported in the popular press, most of the additional energy stored in the climate system since 1970 has gone into ocean warming. The remainder has melted ice, and warmed the continents and atmosphere. Many of the observed changes since the 1950s are unprecedented over decades to millennia.Scientific understanding of global warming is increasing. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reported in 2014 that scientists were more than 95% certain that most of global warming is caused by increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases and other human (anthropogenic) activities. Climate model projections summarized in the report indicated that during the 21st century the global surface temperature is likely to rise a further 0.3 to 1.7 °C (0.5 to 3.1 °F) for their lowest emissions scenario using stringent mitigation and 2.6 to 4.8 °C (4.7 to 8.6 °F) for their highest. These findings have been recognized by the national science academies of the major industrialized nations.Future climate change and associated impacts will differ from region to region around the globe. Anticipated effects include warming global temperature, rising sea levels, changing precipitation, and expansion of deserts in the subtropics. Warming is expected to be greatest in the Arctic, with the continuing retreat of glaciers, permafrost and sea ice. Other likely changes include more frequent extreme weather events including heat waves, droughts, heavy rainfall, and heavy snowfall; ocean acidification; and species extinctions due to shifting temperature regimes. Effects significant to humans include the threat to food security from decreasing crop yields and the abandonment of populated areas due to flooding.Possible societal responses to global warming include mitigation by emissions reduction, adaptation to its effects, building systems resilient to its effects, and possible future climate engineering. Most countries are parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC),whose ultimate objective is to prevent dangerous anthropogenic climate change. The UNFCCC have adopted a range of policies designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and to assist in adaptation to global warming. Parties to the UNFCCC have agreed that deep cuts in emissions are required, and that future global warming should be limited to below 2.0 °C (3.6 °F) relative to the pre-industrial level.
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