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Transcript
1824
French physicist Joseph Fourier is first to describe a "greenhouse effect" in a paper delivered to Paris's
Académie Royale des Sciences.
1861
Irish physicist John Tyndall carries out research on radiant heat and the absorption of radiation by gases
and vapors including CO2 and H2O. He shows that carbon dioxide can absorb in the infrared spectrum,
and it can cause a change in temperature. Tyndall famously declares: "The solar heat possesses. . . the
power of crossing an atmosphere. But when the heat is absorbed by the planet, it is so changed in
quality that the rays emanating from the planet cannot get with the same freedom back into space. Thus
the atmosphere admits of the entrance of the solar heat, but checks its exit. The result is a tendency to
accumulate heat at the surface of the planet."
1896
Swedish chemist Svante Arrhenius first proposes the idea of a man-made greenhouse effect. He
hypothesizes that the increase in the burning of coal since the beginning of industrialization could lead
to an increase in atmospheric CO2 and heat up the earth. Arrhenius was trying to find out why the earth
experienced ice ages. He thought the prospect of future generations living "under a milder sky" would
be a desirable state of affairs.
1938
British engineer Guy Stewart Callendar compiles temperature statistics in a variety of regions and finds
that over the previous century the mean temperature had risen markedly. He also discovers that CO2
levels had risen 10 percent during the same period. He concludes that CO2 was the most likely reason
for the rise in temperature.
1955
John Hopkins University researcher Gilbert Plass proves that increased levels of carbon dioxide could
raise atmospheric temperature. By 1959 Plass is boldly predicting that the earth's temperature would
rise more than 3 degrees Fahrenheit by the end of the century.
In the same year chemist Hans Suess detects the fossil carbon produced by burning fuels, although he
and Roger Revelle - director of the Scripps Institute of Oceanography - declare that the oceans must be
absorbing the majority of atmospheric carbon dioxide, they decide to conduct further research.
1958
Revelle and Suess employ geochemist Charles Keeling to continuously monitor CO2 levels in the
atmosphere. After only two years of measurements in Antarctica an increase is visible. The graph
becomes widely known as the Keeling Curve and becomes an icon of global warming debate and
continues to chart the year on year rise in CO2 concentrations to this day.
1970
The first "Earth Day" takes place on April 22nd across America. Twenty million people participate in the
event organized by Democratic Senator Gaylord Nelson. It follows and precedes a series of U.S.
Department for Energy reports highlighting concern about global warming
1979
The first World Climate Conference is held in Geneva attended by a range of scientists and leads to the
establishment of the World Climate Program.
1985
Scientists at the World Climate Program conference at Villach in Austria confidently predict that
increased CO2 concentrations will lead to a significant rise in the mean surface temperatures of the
earth. A hole in the ozone layer is discovered over Antarctica.
1987
Officially the hottest year on record to date. Three years later the 1980s is confirmed as the hottest
decade since records began.
1988
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is set up by the World Meteorological
Organization (WMO) and by the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP). The IPCC will provide
reports based on scientific evidence which reflect existing viewpoints within the scientific community.
Parts of the Mississippi river are reduced to a trickle and Yellowstone National Park becomes a
tinderbox. In June, Dr James Hansen of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies delivers his famous
testimony to the U.S. Senate. Based on computer models and temperature measurements he is 99
percent sure that the [human caused] greenhouse effect has been detected and it is already changing
the climate.
1990
The IPCC delivers its first assessment on the state of climate change, predicting an increase of 0.3 °C
each decade in the 21st century -- greater than any rise seen over the previous 10,000 years.
1992
The United Nations Conference on Environment and Development -- better known as the Earth Summit
-- takes place in Rio de Janeiro attended by 172 countries. It is the first unified effort to get to grips with
global warming and leads to negotiations which result in the Kyoto Protocol.
1995
The hottest year on record. Four years later the 1990s are confirmed as the hottest decade in 1000
years.
The IPCC report for that year states that "the balance of evidence suggests a discernible human
influence on global climate."
1997
The Kyoto Protocol: Industrialized countries agree to cut their emissions of six key greenhouse gases by
an average of 5.2 percent. Under the terms of the agreement each country -- except developing
countries -- commits to a reduction by 2008 -- 2012 compared to 1990 levels. Notably, the U.S. Congress
vote 95 to 0 against any treaty which doesn't commit developing countries to "meaningful" cuts in
emissions.
2001
Newly elected U.S. President George W. Bush renounces the Kyoto Protocol stating that it will damage
the U.S. economy. The third IPCC report declares that the evidence of global warming over the previous
50 years being fueled by human activities is stronger than ever.
2003
Europe experiences one the hottest summers on record causing widespread drought claiming the lives
of over 30,000 people.
2005
Following ratification by Russia -- the 19th country to do so -- in November 2004, the Kyoto Protocol
becomes a legally binding treaty. America and Australia continue their refusal to sign up claiming
reducing emissions would damage their economies.
2007
175 countries in total have ratified the Kyoto Treaty. Under new Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, Australia
ratifies the treaty. The IPCC report for a fourth time states that "warming of the climate is unequivocal"
and that the levels of temperature and sea rise in the 21st century will depend on the extent or limit of
emissions in the coming years.
Former vice-president Al Gore and the IPCC jointly win the Nobel Peace Prize for services to
environmentalism.
2008
160 square miles of the Wilkins Shelf breaks away from the Antarctic coast. Scientists are concerned
that climate change may be happening faster than previously thought.