Global Warming and Climate Change
... their citizens. This will necessitate a wide range of measures, including significant additional energy use in those countries and compensating reductions in industrialized countries. The transition to a sustainable future will require investments in energy efficiency and non-fossil energy sources. ...
... their citizens. This will necessitate a wide range of measures, including significant additional energy use in those countries and compensating reductions in industrialized countries. The transition to a sustainable future will require investments in energy efficiency and non-fossil energy sources. ...
Nature, Not Human Activity, Rules the Climate
... [IPCC-TAR 2001] was noteworthy for its use of spurious scientific papers to back up its SPM claim of “new and stronger evidence” of anthropogenic global warming. One of these was the so called ‘hockey-stick’ paper, an analysis of proxy data, which claimed the twentieth century was the warmest in the ...
... [IPCC-TAR 2001] was noteworthy for its use of spurious scientific papers to back up its SPM claim of “new and stronger evidence” of anthropogenic global warming. One of these was the so called ‘hockey-stick’ paper, an analysis of proxy data, which claimed the twentieth century was the warmest in the ...
CLIMATE SCIENCE SURVEY
... If a category other than greenhouse gases was considered by the respondent to have had a (slight, moderate or strong) warming influence, a follow-up question was asked about its underlying mechanism. Multiple responses could be given. If the respondent indicated that part of the warming was due to a ...
... If a category other than greenhouse gases was considered by the respondent to have had a (slight, moderate or strong) warming influence, a follow-up question was asked about its underlying mechanism. Multiple responses could be given. If the respondent indicated that part of the warming was due to a ...
Using Data from Climate Science to Teach Introductory Statistics
... ice in the Arctic Ocean reflects sunlight. As the ice melts, the much darker sea water absorbs sunlight. This feedback mechanism is understood as an important driver of climate change throughout geologic history (Pollack, 2011, p. 43, p. 92). There are other possible effects of the loss of summer Ar ...
... ice in the Arctic Ocean reflects sunlight. As the ice melts, the much darker sea water absorbs sunlight. This feedback mechanism is understood as an important driver of climate change throughout geologic history (Pollack, 2011, p. 43, p. 92). There are other possible effects of the loss of summer Ar ...
4.3.1. Atmospheric changes
... in the Baltic Sea. Emission scenarios and forcing AOGCM for each RCA3-simulation are given in the legend (A-P). Simulated changes are shown for three different time periods; (1) 20112040, (2) 2041-2070 and (3) 2071-2100. The grey line is a least-square fit to the data (the slope k is 1.6% per C and ...
... in the Baltic Sea. Emission scenarios and forcing AOGCM for each RCA3-simulation are given in the legend (A-P). Simulated changes are shown for three different time periods; (1) 20112040, (2) 2041-2070 and (3) 2071-2100. The grey line is a least-square fit to the data (the slope k is 1.6% per C and ...
Sulfate Cooling - Global Warming
... Sea surfaces then were ~ 4ºC warmer. Csank ‘11, Dwyer ‘08 Seas then were 20-35 meters higher. ...
... Sea surfaces then were ~ 4ºC warmer. Csank ‘11, Dwyer ‘08 Seas then were 20-35 meters higher. ...
The story of GANDER
... Against this brief historical background, what exactly is GANDER and where, if at all, does it fit into the schemes of future programmes? 2. The development of the GANDER concept The community of altimeter users around the globe is largely drawn from the marine research community. Their main interes ...
... Against this brief historical background, what exactly is GANDER and where, if at all, does it fit into the schemes of future programmes? 2. The development of the GANDER concept The community of altimeter users around the globe is largely drawn from the marine research community. Their main interes ...
Future sea level
The rate of global mean sea-level rise (~3 mm/yr; SLR) has accelerated compared to the mean of the 20th century (~2 mm/yr), but the rate of rise is locally variable. Factors contributing to SLR include decreased global ice volume and warming of the ocean. On Greenland, the deficiency between annual ice gained and lost tripled between 1996 and 2007. On Antarctica the deficiency increased by 75%. Mountain glaciers are retreating and the cumulative mean thickness change has accelerated from about −1.8 to −4 m in 1965 to 1970 to about −12 to −14 m in the first decade of the 21st century. From 1961 to 2003, ocean temperatures to a depth of 700 m increased and portions of the deeper ocean are warming.The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2007) projected sea level would reach 0.18 to 0.59 m above present by the end of the 21st century but lacked an estimate of ice flow dynamics calving. Calving was added by Pfeffer et al. (2008) indicating 0.8 to 2 m of SLR by 2100 (favouring the low end of this range). Rahmstorf (2007) estimated SLR will reach 0.5 to 1.4 m by the end of the century. Pielke (2008) points out that observed SLR has exceeded the best case projections thus far. These approximations and others indicate that global mean SLR may reach 1 m by the end of this century. However, sea level is highly variable and planners considering local impacts must take this variability into account.