Global Warming

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Global Warming

I INTRODUCTION

Global Warming or Climate Change, measurable increases in the average temperature of Earth’s
atmosphere, oceans, and landmasses. Scientists believe Earth is currently facing a period of rapid
warming brought on by rising levels of heat-trapping gases, known as greenhouse gases, in the
atmosphere.

Greenhouse gases retain the radiant energy (heat) provided to Earth by the Sun in a process known
as the greenhouse effect. Greenhouse gases occur naturally, and without them the planet would be
too cold to sustain life as we know it. Since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution in the mid-
1700s, however, human activities have added more and more of these gases into the atmosphere. For
example, levels of carbon dioxide, a powerful greenhouse gas, have risen by 35 percent since 1750,
largely from the burning of fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and natural gas. With more greenhouse gases
in the mix, the atmosphere acts like a thickening blanket and traps more heat.

II GLOBAL WARMING IN THE PAST

Earth has warmed and cooled many times since its formation about 4.6 billion years ago. Global
climate changes were due to many factors, including massive volcanic eruptions, which increased
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere; changes in the intensity of energy emitted by the Sun; and
variations in Earth’s position relative to the Sun, both in its orbit and in the inclination of its spin axis.

Variations in Earth’s position, known as Milankovitch cycles, combine to produce cyclical changes in
the global climate. These cycles are believed to be responsible for the repeated advance and retreat of
glaciers and ice sheets during the Pleistocene Epoch (1.8 million to 11,500 years before present),
when Earth went through fairly regular cycles of colder “glacial” periods (also known as ice ages) and
warmer “interglacial” periods. Glacial periods occurred at roughly 100,000-year intervals.

An interglacial period began about 10,000 years ago, when the last ice age came to an end. Prior to
that ice age, an interglacial period occurred about 125,000 years ago. During interglacial periods,
greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane naturally increase in the atmosphere from
increased plant and animal life. But since 1750 greenhouse gases have increased dramatically to
levels not seen in hundreds of thousands of years, due to the rapid growth of the human population
combined with developments in technology and agriculture. Human activities now are a powerful
factor influencing Earth’s dynamic climate.

The ice of the polar regions furnishes clues to the makeup of Earth’s ancient atmosphere. Ice cores
that scientists have bored from the ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica provide natural records of
both temperature and atmospheric greenhouse gases going back hundreds of thousands of years.
Layers in these ice cores created by seasonal snowfall patterns allow scientists to determine the age of
the ice in each core. By measuring tiny air bubbles trapped in the ice and properties of the ice itself,
scientists can estimate the temperature and amount of greenhouse gases in Earth’s past atmosphere
at the time each layer formed. Based on this data, scientists know that greenhouse gases have now
risen to levels higher than at any time in the last 650,000 years.

Greenhouse gases are rising, and temperatures are following. Before the late 1800s,
the average surface temperature of Earth was almost 15°C (59°F). Over the past 100 years, the
average surface temperature has risen by about 0.7 Celsius degrees (1.3 Fahrenheit degrees), with
most of the increase occurring since the 1970s. Scientists have linked even this amount of warming to
numerous changes taking place around the world, including melting mountain glaciers and polar ice,
rising sea level, more intense and longer droughts, more intense storms, more frequent heat waves,
and changes in the life cycles of many plants and animals. Warming has been most dramatic in the
Arctic, where temperatures have risen almost twice as much as the global average.

III GLOBAL WARMING IN THE FUTURE

Scientists project global warming to continue at a rate that is unprecedented in hundreds of thousands
or even millions of years of Earth’s history. They predict considerably more warming in the 21st
century, depending on the level of future greenhouse gas emissions. For a scenario (possible
situation) assuming higher emissions—in which emissions continue to increase significantly during the
century—scientists project further warming of 2.4 to 6.4 Celsius degrees (4.3 to 11.5 Fahrenheit
degrees) by the year 2100. For a scenario assuming lower emissions—in which emissions grow slowly,
peak around the year 2050, and then fall—scientists project further warming of 1.1 to 2.9 Celsius
degrees (1.9 to 5.2 Fahrenheit degrees) by the year 2100.

Melting polar ice and glaciers, as well as warming of the oceans, expands ocean volume and raises sea
level, which will eventually flood some coastal regions and even entire islands. Patterns of rainfall are
expected to change, with higher latitudes (closer to the poles) projected to receive more rainfall, and
subtropical areas (such as the Mediterranean and southern Africa) projected to receive considerably
less. Changes in temperature and precipitation patterns may damage food crops, disrupting food
production in some parts of the world. Plant and animal species will shift their ranges toward the poles
or to higher elevations seeking cooler temperatures, and species that cannot do so may become
extinct. Increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere also leads to increased ocean acidity,
damaging ocean ecosystems.
Human beings face global warming with a huge population at risk. The potential consequences are so
great that many of the world’s leading scientists—and increasingly, politicians, business leaders, and
other citizens—are calling for international cooperation and immediate action to counteract the
problem.

IV THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT

The energy that lights and warms Earth comes from the Sun. Short-wave radiation from the Sun,
including visible light, penetrates the atmosphere and is absorbed by the surface, warming Earth.
Earth’s surface, in turn, releases some of this heat as long-wave infrared radiation.

Much of this long-wave infrared radiation makes it back out to space, but a portion remains trapped in
Earth’s atmosphere, held in by certain atmospheric gases, including water vapor, carbon dioxide, and
methane. Absorbing and reflecting heat radiated by Earth, these gases act somewhat like the glass in
a greenhouse, and are thus known as greenhouse gases.

Only greenhouse gases, which make up less than 1 percent of the atmosphere, offer the Earth any
insulation. All life on Earth relies on the greenhouse effect—without it, the average surface
temperature of the planet would be about -18°C (0°F) and ice would cover Earth from pole to pole.

A Types of Greenhouse Gases

Greenhouse gases occur naturally in the environment and also result from human activities. By far the
most abundant greenhouse gas is water vapor, which reaches the atmosphere through evaporation
from oceans, lakes, and rivers. The amount of water vapor in the atmosphere is not directly affected
by human activities. Carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and ozone all occur naturally in the
environment, but they are being produced at record levels by human activities. Other greenhouse
gases do not occur naturally at all and are produced only through industrial processes. Human
activities also produce airborne particles called aerosols, which offset some of the warming influence
of increasing greenhouse gases.

A1 Carbon Dioxide

Carbon dioxide is the second most abundant greenhouse gas, after water vapor.
Carbon dioxide constantly circulates in the environment through a variety of natural processes known
as the carbon cycle. It is released into the atmosphere from natural processes such as eruptions of
volcanoes; the respiration of animals, which breathe in oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide; and the
burning or decay of plants and other organic matter. Carbon dioxide leaves the atmosphere when it is
absorbed into water, especially the oceans, and by plants, especially trees. Through a process called
photosynthesis, plants use the energy of light to convert carbon dioxide and water into simple sugars,
which they use as food. In the process, plants store carbon in new tissue and release oxygen as a
byproduct.

Humans are significantly increasing the amount of carbon dioxide released to the atmosphere through
the burning of fossil fuels (such as coal, oil, and natural gas), solid wastes, and wood and wood
products to heat buildings, drive vehicles, and generate electricity. At the same time, the number of
trees available to absorb carbon dioxide through photosynthesis has been greatly reduced by
deforestation, the widespread cutting of trees for lumber or to clear land for agriculture.

Human activities are causing carbon dioxide to be released to the atmosphere much faster than
Earth’s natural processes can remove it. In addition, carbon dioxide can remain in the atmosphere a
century or more before nature can dispose of it. Before the Industrial Revolution began in the mid-
1700s, there were about 280 molecules of carbon dioxide per million molecules of air (abbreviated as
parts per million, or ppm). Concentrations of carbon dioxide have risen since then as industrial
production and fossil fuel-based transportation and electricity generation have spread around the
world, accelerating in the last 50 years. The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) reported that in 2007 levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere reached 385 ppm, an
increase of 2.6 ppm from 2006.

To stabilize atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide, global emissions would need to be cut
significantly—on the order of 70 to 80 percent. If efforts are not made to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions, carbon dioxide is projected to reach concentrations more than double or even triple the
level prior to the Industrial Revolution by 2100. In a higher-emissions scenario carbon dioxide is
projected to reach 970 ppm by 2100, more than tripling preindustrial concentrations. In a lower-
emissions scenario, carbon dioxide is projected to reach 540 ppm by 2100, still almost doubling
preindustrial concentrations. (For a description of these two emissions scenarios, see the Introduction:
Global Warming in the Future section of this article.)

A2 Methane

Methane is emitted into the atmosphere during the mining of coal and the production and transport of
natural gas and oil. Methane also comes from rotting organic matter in landfills, rice paddies, and
wetlands, as well as from certain animals, especially cows, as a byproduct of digestion. Live plants
also emit small amounts of methane.

Scientists are increasingly concerned about the release of methane and carbon dioxide from melting
permafrost, areas of frozen ground in the tundra (Arctic plains) of Alaska, Siberia, and other subpolar
regions. Temperatures in the top layer of permafrost have increased, leading to a decrease in the area
of seasonally frozen ground. Methane released from these areas as they melt would contribute to
further warming and further melting, in what scientists call a feedback process.
Since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, the amount of methane in the atmosphere has more
than doubled. Methane traps nearly 30 times more heat than the same amount of carbon dioxide.
Compared to carbon dioxide, methane appears in lower concentrations in the atmosphere and remains
in the atmosphere for a shorter time. In total, methane contributes about a third as much as carbon
dioxide to global warming.

A3 Nitrous Oxide

Nitrous oxide is a potent greenhouse gas that is released primarily by plowing farm soils and burning
fossil fuels. Nitrous oxide traps about 300 times more heat than does the same amount of carbon
dioxide. The concentration of nitrous oxide in the atmosphere has increased 18 percent over
preindustrial levels. Nitrous oxide contributes about a tenth as much as carbon dioxide to global
warming.

A4 Ozone

Ozone is both a natural and human-made greenhouse gas. Ozone in the upper atmosphere is known
as the ozone layer and shields life on Earth from the Sun’s harmful ultraviolet radiation. This ozone is
formed by the action of ultraviolet light from the Sun on molecules of ordinary oxygen. Some chemical
compounds are known to destroy ozone molecules in the upper atmosphere. This can break down, or
deplete, the ozone layer. Depletion of the ozone layer actually causes a slight cooling, offsetting a
small part of the warming from greenhouse gases.

However, ozone in the lower atmosphere is a component of smog, a severe type of air pollution.
Nitrogen oxides and volatile organic gases emitted by automobiles and industrial sources combine to
form the ozone in smog. This ozone is a poison that damages vegetation, kills trees, irritates lung
tissues, and attacks rubber. It is also a greenhouse gas that contributes about a fourth as much as
carbon dioxide to global warming. Unlike the greenhouse gases discussed above, which are well-mixed
throughout the atmosphere, ozone in the lower atmosphere tends to be limited to industrialized
regions.

A5 Synthetic Chemicals

Manufacturing processes use or generate many synthetic chemicals that are powerful greenhouse
gases. Although these gases are produced in relatively small quantities, they trap hundreds to
thousands of times more heat in the atmosphere than an equal amount of carbon dioxide does. In
addition, their chemical bonds make them exceptionally long-lived in the environment.

Human-made greenhouse gases include chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), a family of chlorine-containing


gases that were widely used in the 20th century as refrigerants, aerosol spray propellants, and
cleaning agents. Scientific studies showed that the chlorine released by CFCs into the upper
atmosphere destroys the ozone layer. As a result, CFCs are being phased out of production under a
1987 international treaty, the Montréal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer. CFCs
were mostly banned in industrialized nations beginning in 1996 and will be phased out in developing
countries after 2010. New chemicals have been developed to replace CFCs, but they are also potent
greenhouse gases. The substitutes include hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs), hydrofluorocarbons
(HFCs), and perfluorocarbons (PFCs).

Although HCFCs are less damaging to the ozone layer than CFCs, they also contain chlorine and are
scheduled to be completely phased out by 2030 under amendments made in 2007 to the Montréal
Protocol. Developed countries must end their use of HCFCs by 2020 under the amended protocol.

Although HFCs and PFCs do not destroy the ozone layer, they are powerful greenhouse gases. In
addition, they last longer in the atmosphere than CFCs, which have an average lifespan of 120 years.
PFCs are exceptionally long-lived chemicals—they can persist in the atmosphere between 2,600 and
50,000 years, depending on the specific compound. Their accumulation in the atmosphere is therefore
essentially irreversible. PFCs are used in the production of aluminum, in the manufacture of
semiconductors, and as refrigerants.

Another human-made chemical, sulfur hexafluoride, is one of the most potentially destructive
greenhouse gases ever produced. This synthetic gas compound has nearly 24,000 times the warming
effect of an equal amount of carbon dioxide over a period of 100 years. It is an exceptionally stable
gas with an estimated lifespan of 3,200 years once it is released in the atmosphere. Sulfur
hexafluoride is used as insulation for high-voltage electrical equipment and in the production and
casting of magnesium.

B Aerosols

Fuel combustion, and to a lesser extent agricultural and industrial processes, produce not only gases
but also tiny solid and liquid particles called aerosols that remain suspended in the atmosphere.
Although aerosols are not considered greenhouse gases, they do affect global warming in several
ways.

Diesel engines and some types of biomass burning produce black aerosols such as soot, which absorb
the Sun’s energy and therefore contribute to warming. Conversely, coal-fired power plants burning
high-sulfur coal emit sulfate aerosols, which are light-colored aerosols that reflect incoming solar
energy back to space. In this way, they have a cooling effect. Natural aerosols that also have a cooling
effect are produced during volcanic eruptions and the evaporation of seawater. Aerosol particles also
have an indirect cooling influence by acting as “seeds” for the condensation of water vapor into cloud
masses. In general, the amount of solar energy reflected back to space is greater on cloudy days.

Overall, aerosols may roughly offset the net warming influence of non-carbon dioxide greenhouse
gases, half through their direct cooling effect and half through their indirect cooling effect. However,
considerable uncertainty in aerosol processes means that their cooling influence could be much larger
or much smaller. Aerosols are one of the least-understood factors in climate change and their effects
are still being debated. Scientists are more certain, however, about the net effect of all greenhouse
gas and aerosol emissions, which is estimated to be roughly equal to the warming influence of carbon
dioxide alone.

V MEASURING GLOBAL WARMING

As early as 1896 scientists suggested that burning fossil fuels might change the composition of the
atmosphere and that an increase in global average temperature might result. The first part of this
hypothesis was confirmed in 1957, when researchers working in the global research program called
the International Geophysical Year sampled the atmosphere from the top of the Hawaiian volcano
Mauna Loa. Their instruments indicated that carbon dioxide concentration was indeed rising. Since
then, the composition of the atmosphere has been carefully tracked. The data collected show
undeniably that the concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere are increasing.

Measuring warming of the global climate (the long-term average pattern of temperature) is a complex
process. Temperatures vary widely all the time and from place to place, and a local warming trend
may simply be due to the natural variability of the climate. But using many years of climate
observations from around the world, scientists have detected a warming trend beyond such random
fluctuations.

Records going back to the late 1800s show a warming trend, but these statistics were spotty and
untrustworthy. However, since 1957 data have been gathered from more reliable weather stations,
located far away from cities, and since 1979 from satellites. These data have provided new, more
accurate measurements, especially for the 70 percent of the planetary surface that is ocean water.
These more accurate records indicate that a clear surface warming trend exists and that temperatures
have risen particularly sharply in the last few decades.

Eleven out of the twelve warmest years on record have occurred since 1995, with 2001-2006 all in the
top six. Not every place in the world is warming at the same rate, or even warming at all—in fact,
some parts of the world cooled over the 20th century. For this reason, many scientists use the term
climate change rather than global warming. However, taking all of the local measurements together,
the world is warming significantly, and many more places are warming than are cooling.

A Debates Over Global Warming

While the behavior of the climate system and the processes that cause global warming are well
understood and grounded in basic scientific principles, scientists are still working to understand certain
details of the climate system and its response to increasing greenhouse gases. Scientific uncertainty is
inevitable with a system as complex as Earth’s climate. However, advancements in measuring,
analyzing, and modeling techniques have helped clarify many uncertainties in recent years.

For example, there had been uncertainty regarding why the warming trend stopped for three decades
in the middle of the 20th century. Records even showed some cooling before the climb resumed in the
1970s. The lack of warming at mid-century is now attributed largely to the sulfate aerosols in air
pollution, which have a cooling effect because they reflect some incoming sunlight back to space.
Continued warming has now overcome this effect, in part because pollution control efforts have made
the air cleaner.

Satellite measurements of atmospheric temperature, which became available around 1980, originally
were thought to measure much less warming in the lower region of the atmosphere than surface
thermometers. This led to some doubt about the accuracy of the warming detected at the surface.
Eventually, other researchers reanalyzed the satellite data using more advanced techniques and
concluded that the satellites were detecting warming quite similar to surface measurements. While
there is still some uncertainty, scientists examining the satellite data now agree that the record is
consistent with a warming world.

For many years global warming was portrayed in the media as an issue with two sides, with some
scientists arguing that global warming is occurring and others arguing that it is not. However, this
portrayal was an oversimplification of the scientific debate. Skeptics of global warming, including some
scientists, pointed to lingering scientific uncertainties to question whether global warming is actually
occurring. However, there is now undeniable evidence that global temperatures are increasing, based
on direct temperature measurements and observations of other impacts such as melting glaciers and
polar ice, rising sea level, and changes in the lifecycles of plants and animals. As the scientific
evidence on rising global temperature became indisputable, skeptics focused their argument on
whether human activities are in fact the cause of global warming. They argued that the observed
warming could be caused by natural processes such as changes in the energy emitted by the Sun.
However, the Sun’s influence has been found to have contributed only slightly to observed warming,
particularly since the mid-20th century. In fact, there is overwhelming evidence that greenhouse gas
emissions from human activities are the main cause of the warming.

In 1988 the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) and the World Meteorological Organization
(WMO) established the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The panel comprises
thousands of the top climate scientists from around the world and releases a report every six years
describing the state of scientific knowledge on global warming. The IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report,
released in 2007, offered the strongest scientific consensus to date on global warming. The panel
concluded that it is “very likely” (more than 90 percent probability) that human activities are
responsible for most of the warming since the mid-20th century; that it is “extremely unlikely” (less
than 5 percent probability) that the warming is due to natural variability; and that it is “very likely”
the warming is not due to natural causes alone. This level of certainty is extremely high, given the
complexity of the climate system and of the influence of human activities on the climate.
B Global Warming Projections

In its 2007 report the IPCC projected temperature increases for several different scenarios, depending
on the magnitude of future greenhouse gas emissions. For a “moderate” scenario—in which emissions
grow slowly, peak around the year 2050, and then fall—the IPCC report projected further warming of
1.1 to 2.9 Celsius degrees (1.9 to 5.2 Fahrenheit degrees) by the year 2100. For a “high-emissions”
scenario—in which emissions continue to increase significantly and finally level off at the end of the
century—the IPCC report projected further warming of 2.4 to 6.4 Celsius degrees (4.3 to 11.5
Fahrenheit degrees) by the year 2100.

The IPCC cautioned that even if greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere ceased growing,
the climate would continue to warm for an extended period as a result of past emissions, and with
more dramatic effects than were observed during the 20th century. If greenhouse gas emissions
continue to increase, scientists project severe climate changes.

In October 2007 a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences warned
that climate models used to project future global warming may have been overly optimistic. The study
found that atmospheric carbon dioxide levels had increased 35 percent from 1990 to 2006, a rate of
increase far higher than most climate models had assumed. The researchers reported that the
average rate of growth in carbon dioxide levels was 1.3 percent during the period from 1990 to 1999,
but 3.3 percent from 2000 to 2006. In 2000 an estimated 7 billion metric tons of carbon were released
into the atmosphere from burning fossil fuels; by 2006 that number had grown to 8.4 billion metric
tons, according to the study. Scientists pointed to the unexpectedly rapid melting of sea ice in the
Arctic Ocean during the summer of 2007 as evidence that climate models were failing to predict how
quickly the climate was changing.

VI EFFECTS OF GLOBAL WARMING

Scientists use elaborate computer models of temperature, precipitation patterns, and atmosphere
circulation to study global warming. Based on these models, scientists have made many projections
about how global warming will affect weather, glacial ice, sea levels, agriculture, wildlife, and human
health. Many changes linked to rising temperatures are already being observed.

A Weather

Scientists project that the polar regions of the Northern Hemisphere will heat up more than other
areas of the planet, and glaciers and sea ice will shrink as a result. Regions that now experience light
winter snows may receive no snow at all. In temperate mountains, snowlines will be higher and
snowpacks will melt earlier. Growing seasons will be longer in some areas. Winter and nighttime
temperatures will tend to rise more than summer and daytime temperatures. Many of these trends are
already beginning to be observed. Arctic temperatures, for example, have increased almost twice as
much as the global average over the past 100 years.

A warmer world will be generally more humid as a result of more water evaporating from the oceans.
A more humid atmosphere can both contribute to and offset further warming. On the one hand, water
vapor is a greenhouse gas, and its increased presence would further increase warming. On the other
hand, more water vapor in the atmosphere will produce more clouds, which reflect sunlight back into
space, thereby slowing the warming process (see Water Cycle). It is uncertain which of these effects
will be greater in the future, and scientists factor in both possibilities when projecting temperature
increases. This is one of the main reasons that projections include ranges of high and low
temperatures for different emissions scenarios.

Storms are expected to be more frequent and more intense in a warmer world. Water will also
evaporate more rapidly from soil, causing it to dry out faster between rains. Some regions might
actually become drier than before. Overall, higher latitudes are projected to receive more rainfall, and
subtropical areas are projected to receive less. Shifting patterns of precipitation (both snow and rain)
have been observed in many regions since 1900. Significantly wetter conditions have been recorded in
the eastern parts of North and South America, northern Europe, and northern and central Asia. Drier
conditions have prevailed in the Sahel region of western Africa, southern Africa, the Mediterranean,
and parts of southern Asia. Droughts are projected to become longer and more intense; in fact, this
has already been observed since the 1970s, particularly in the tropics and subtropics.

Weather patterns are expected to be less predictable and more extreme. Storm tracks are projected
to move toward the poles, shifting wind, rainfall, and temperature patterns. Heat waves will continue
to become more frequent and intense, a trend already observed. Hurricanes, violent storms that draw
their force from warm ocean water, are likely to become more severe. The intensity of hurricanes has
already increased since the 1970s.

B Ice Sheets and Glaciers

Warming temperatures are already causing significant changes to mountain glaciers around the world,
ice sheets in Greenland and the Antarctic, and polar sea ice in the Arctic. From Europe to Africa to Asia
to North America, mountain glaciers have receded over the 20th century, and melting is becoming
more rapid. The large-scale melting of ice may accelerate the pace of global warming in what is known
as a feedback process. Because ice reflects sunlight back out to space, it has a cooling effect. Water
and land, which are darker than ice, absorb and retain more heat.

Glaciers on Kilimanjaro, the highest mountain in Africa, have lost 82 percent of their ice since 1912
and are estimated to be gone completely by 2020. Glaciers in the lofty Himalayas of Asia are melting
at a rate of 9 to 15 m (30 to 50 ft) per year. Annual runoff from these glaciers feeds major rivers such
as the Ganges, Yangtze, and Mekong. Glacier National Park in Montana is projected to have no
glaciers left by 2030, and the number of glaciers has already dropped from an estimated 150 in 1850
to 26 in 2007.

In the Arctic annual average temperature has increased at almost twice the global rate over the past
few decades. The area covered by sea ice during summer has declined by 15 to 20 percent in the last
30 years, and is projected to disappear almost completely late in the 21st century. Many species,
including polar bears, seals, and walrus, depend on sea ice for their survival. The rapid loss of Alaskan
glaciers represents almost half of the total loss of ice in glaciers worldwide, and makes a significant
contribution to observed sea level rise. Melting of the Greenland ice sheet, which could raise sea level
by 7 m (23 ft) if it melted completely, is also accelerating. The area that is experiencing at least some
melting increased by 16 percent from 1979 to 2002, and scientists estimate that warming of more
than a few degrees Celsius could cause widespread and possibly unstoppable melting, leading to
significant sea level rise.

Fresh water flowing from melting Arctic ice into the North Atlantic Ocean could disrupt ocean
circulation patterns, which have a significant influence on the global climate. According to scientific
projections, a collapse of ocean circulation patterns is unlikely to occur by 2100. However, scientists
do expect there to be a weakening and slowing of the thermohaline circulation, also known as the
ocean conveyor belt. In addition, a disruption of surface circulation patterns in the North Atlantic,
known collectively as the Gulf Stream, could lead to cooling in Europe.

In Antarctica the situation is somewhat different than in the Arctic. The Antarctic Peninsula, the “tail”
of land reaching toward South America, has experienced dramatic warming at a rate several times the
global average over the past 50 years. However, other parts of Antarctica have not shown similar
trends, with some areas warming and some cooling. Overall, Antarctica is estimated to be warming at
about the global average rate. Unlike the Arctic, there has been no clear general trend in sea ice. In
the Antarctic Peninsula, however, ten floating ice shelves have lost more than 14,000 sq km (5,400 sq
mi) of ice, and probably have not been at such a low level in the past 10,000 years. As in Greenland,
scientists estimate that warming of more than a few degrees Celsius could lead to widespread melting
of the West Antarctica ice sheet. This melting alone would raise sea level by as much as 5 m (16 ft).

C Sea Level

As the atmosphere warms, the surface layer of the ocean warms as well, expanding in volume and
thus raising sea level. The melting of glaciers and ice sheets, especially around Greenland, further
swells the sea. Sea level rose 10 to 25 cm (4 to 10 in) during the 20th century. (The range is due to
measurement uncertainties and regional variation.) By the end of the 21st century, sea level is
projected to rise another 28 to 58 cm (11 to 23 in) if greenhouse gas emissions continue to increase
significantly. The projection is somewhat less—a rise of 19 to 37 cm (8 to 15 in)—for a scenario in
which greenhouse gas emissions peak around the year 2050 and then decrease. These projections do
not incorporate possible large-scale melting of the Greenland or Antarctic ice sheets, which could
begin in the 21st century with warming of a few degrees Celsius.
Rising sea level will complicate life in many island and coastal regions. Storm surges, in which winds
locally pile up water and raise the sea, will become more frequent and damaging. Erosion of cliffs,
beaches, and dunes will increase. As the sea invades the mouths of rivers, flooding from runoff will
also increase upstream.

Small island nations such as Tuvalu and Kiribati, where the highest land is only a few meters above
sea level, are already experiencing saltwater intrusion, which is making groundwater undrinkable, and
increased impacts from typhoons and heavy surf. These nations could literally cease to exist as the
rise in sea level continues, and their governments are negotiating with other nations to transplant
their populations.

Even a modest rise in sea level will have huge impacts on coastal ecosystems. For example, a 50-cm
(20-in) rise would submerge about half of the present coastal wetlands of the United States and other
low-lying areas such as parts of New Orleans and the Louisiana coast. Much of the Florida Everglades
would be lost to the sea. New marshes would eventually form in many places, but not where urban
areas and developed landscapes block the way.

Damage can be curbed locally in various ways. Coastlines can be armored with dikes, levies, and other
barriers to block encroachment of the sea. Alternatively, governments can assist coastal populations in
moving to higher ground, although such a process is extremely costly, especially in heavily populated
areas. Some extremely low-lying countries would face rising sea level with huge populations at risk.
Wealthy countries like The Netherlands may need to spend huge amounts of money to protect their
shorelines, while poor countries like Bangladesh may be forced to simply abandon low-lying coastal
regions.

D Agriculture

Global warming of a few degrees may increase agricultural production, but not necessarily in the same
places where crops are grown now. Southern Canada, for example, may benefit from more rainfall and
a longer growing season. At the same time, the semiarid tropical farmlands in some parts of Africa
may become further impoverished. Farming regions such as California’s Central Valley that bring in
irrigation water from distant mountains may suffer as the winter snowpack, which functions as a
natural reservoir, melts before the peak growing months. Crops and woodlands may also be afflicted
by more insects and plant diseases. Agricultural areas will need to adapt to changing conditions, such
as by shifting the types of crops grown or investing in drought-tolerant or heat-tolerant varieties.
Scientists estimate that warming of up to about 3 Celsius degrees (5.4 Fahrenheit degrees) could
increase global agricultural potential, but that further warming is likely to decrease this potential.

E Plants and Animals


Plants and animals will find it difficult to escape from or adjust to the effects of global warming.
Scientists have already observed shifts in the lifecycles of many plants and animals, such as flowers
blooming earlier and birds hatching earlier in the spring. Many species have begun shifting where they
live or their annual migration patterns due to warmer temperatures.

With further warming, animals will tend to migrate toward the poles and up mountainsides toward
higher elevations. Plants will also attempt to shift their ranges, seeking new areas as old habitats grow
too warm. In many places, however, human development will prevent these shifts. Species that find
cities or farmland blocking their way north or south may become extinct. Species living in unique
ecosystems, such as those found in polar and mountaintop regions, are especially at risk because
migration to new habitats is not possible. For example, polar bears and marine mammals in the Arctic
are already threatened by dwindling sea ice but have nowhere farther north to go.

Projecting species extinction due to global warming is extremely difficult. Some scientists have
estimated that 20 to 50 percent of species could be committed to extinction with 2 to 3 Celsius
degrees (3.6 to 5.4 Fahrenheit degrees) of further warming. The rate of warming, not just the
magnitude, is extremely important for plants and animals. Some species and even entire ecosystems,
such as certain types of forest, may not be able to adjust quickly enough and may disappear.

Ocean ecosystems, especially fragile ones like coral reefs, will also be affected by global warming.
Warmer ocean temperatures can cause coral to “bleach,” a state which if prolonged will lead to the
death of the coral. Scientists estimate that even 1 Celsius degree (1.8 Fahrenheit degrees) of
additional warming could lead to widespread bleaching and death of coral reefs around the world.
Also, increasing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere enters the ocean and increases the acidity of ocean
waters. This acidification further stresses ocean ecosystems.

F Human Health

In a warmer world, scientists predict that more people will get sick or die from heat stress, due not
only to hotter days but more importantly to warmer nights (giving the sufferers less relief). More
frequent and intense heat waves will further contribute to this trend. At the same time, there will be
some decreases in the number of cold-related deaths. Diseases such as malaria, now found in the
tropics and transmitted by mosquitoes and other animal hosts, are projected to widen their range as
these animal hosts move into regions formerly too cold for them. Other tropical diseases may spread
similarly, including dengue fever, yellow fever, and encephalitis. Scientists also project rising incidence
of allergies and respiratory diseases as warmer air grows more charged with pollutants, mold spores,
and pollens.

VII EFFORTS TO CONTROL GLOBAL WARMING


Responding to the challenge of controlling global warming will require fundamental changes in energy
production, transportation, industry, government policies, and development strategies around the
world. These changes take time. The challenge today is managing the impacts that cannot be avoided
while taking steps to prevent more severe impacts in the future.

Reducing emissions of greenhouse gases, also called greenhouse gas mitigation, is a necessary
strategy for controlling global warming. There are two major approaches to slowing the buildup of
greenhouse gases. One is to reduce the consumption of fossil fuels, thereby reducing greenhouse gas
emissions. The other is to keep carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere by storing the gas or its carbon
component somewhere else, a strategy known as carbon sequestration or carbon capture.

A Carbon Capture

One way to keep carbon dioxide emissions from reaching the atmosphere is to preserve and plant
more trees. Trees, especially young and fast-growing ones, soak up a great deal of carbon dioxide
from the atmosphere and store carbon atoms in new wood. Worldwide, forests are being cleared at an
alarming rate, particularly in the tropics. In many areas, there is little regrowth as land loses fertility
or is changed to other uses, such as farming or housing developments. In addition, when trees are
burned to clear land, they release stored carbon back into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide. Slowing
the rate of deforestation and planting new trees can help counteract the buildup of greenhouse gases.

Carbon dioxide gas can also be captured directly. Carbon dioxide has traditionally been injected into
depleted oil wells to force more oil out of the ground or seafloor. The same process can be used to
store carbon dioxide released by a power plant, factory, or any large stationary source. For example,
since 1996 this process has been used at a natural gas drilling platform off the coast of Norway.
Carbon dioxide brought to the surface with the natural gas is captured, compressed, and then injected
into an aquifer deep below the seabed from which it cannot escape. In most cases, the process of
carbon capture would also involve transporting the gas in compressed form to suitable locations for
underground storage. Deep ocean waters could also absorb a great deal of carbon dioxide, although
the environmental effects may be harmful to ocean life. The feasibility and environmental effects of
these options are under study by international teams.

B Energy Sources

The total worldwide consumption of fossil fuels is increasing by several percent per year. However,
energy use around the world is slowly shifting away from fuels that release a great deal of carbon
dioxide toward fuels that release somewhat less of this heat-trapping gas.

Wood was the first major source of energy used by humans. With the advent of the Industrial
Revolution in the mid-1700s, coal became the dominant energy source. By the mid-1800s oil had
replaced coal in dominance, fueling the internal combustion engines that were eventually used in
automobiles. By the 1900s, natural gas began to be used worldwide for heating and lighting. In this
progression, combustion of natural gas releases less carbon dioxide than oil, which in turn releases
less of the gas than do either coal or wood. However, a reversal of this trend may be seen as reserves
of oil are used up. Other fuel sources such as tar sands (also known as oil sands) are beginning to be
utilized. Producing oil from tar sands involves extraction and refining processes that release carbon
dioxide. In addition, the relative abundance of coal reserves in countries such as China and the United
States may lead to a new upswing in the use of coal for generating electricity. Newer technologies for
cleaner coal-burning power plants may help offset the effects.

Significant reductions in carbon dioxide emissions can only be achieved by switching away from fossil-
fuel energy sources. Nuclear power plants release no carbon dioxide at all, but nuclear energy is
controversial for reasons of safety, security, and the high costs of nuclear waste disposal. Solar power,
wind power, and hydrogen fuel cells also emit no greenhouse gases. These energy sources can be
practical, low-pollution alternatives to fossil fuels. Other alternatives include fuels made from plants,
such as biodiesel (made from used and new vegetable oil) and ethanol (a plant-based gasoline
additive). Use of these fuels can help reduce total carbon dioxide emissions from automobiles.
The hybrid electric vehicle (HEV), which uses both an electric motor and a gasoline or diesel engine,
emits less carbon dioxide than conventional automobiles (see Electric Car). See also World Energy
Supply.

C International Agreements

International cooperation is required for the successful reduction of greenhouse gases. The first
international conference addressing the issue was held in 1992 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. At the United
Nations Conference on Environment and Development, informally known as the Earth Summit, 150
countries pledged to confront the problem of greenhouse gases by signing the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). To date, more than 180 nations have ratified
the UNFCCC, which commits nations to stabilizing greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at
a level that would avoid dangerous human interference with the climate. This is to be done so that
ecosystems can adapt naturally to global warming, food production is not threatened, and economic
development can proceed in a sustainable manner.

The nations at the Earth Summit agreed to meet again to translate these good intentions into a
binding treaty for emissions reductions. In 1997 in Japan, 160 nations drafted an agreement known as
the Kyōto Protocol, an amendment to the UNFCCC. This treaty set mandatory targets for the reduction
of greenhouse gas emissions. Industrialized nations that ratify the treaty are required to cut their
emissions by an average of 5 percent below 1990 levels. This reduction is to be achieved no later than
2012, and commitments to start achieving the targets are to begin in 2008. Developing nations are
not required to commit to mandatory reductions in emissions. Under the Kyōto rules, industrialized
nations are expected to take the first steps because they are responsible for most emissions to date
and have more resources to devote to emissions-reduction efforts.
The protocol could not go into effect unless industrialized nations accounting for 55 percent of 1990
greenhouse gas emissions ratified it. That requirement was met in November 2004 when Russia
approved the treaty, and it went into force in February 2005. By the end of 2006, 166 nations had
signed and ratified the treaty. Notable exceptions included the United States and Australia.

In 1998 the United States—then the world’s single largest contributor to greenhouse gas emissions—
became a signatory to the Kyōto Protocol. However, in 2001 U.S. president George W. Bush withdrew
support for the treaty. He claimed that the treaty’s goals for reducing carbon dioxide emissions would
be too costly and would harm the U.S. economy. He also claimed the treaty put an unfair burden on
industrialized nations. Opposition to the treaty in the United States was spurred by the oil industry,
the coal industry, and other enterprises that manufacture or depend on fossil fuels. These opponents
claimed that the economic costs to carry out the Kyōto Protocol could be as much as $300 billion, due
mainly to higher energy prices. Proponents of the Kyōto Protocol believed the costs would prove more
modest—$88 billion or less—much of which would be recovered as Americans switched to more
efficient appliances, vehicles, and industrial processes.

The Kyōto Protocol, which expires in 2012, is only a first step in addressing greenhouse gas emissions.
To stabilize or reduce emissions in the 21st century, much stronger and broader action is required. In
part this is because the Kyōto provisions did not take into account the rapid industrialization of
countries such as China and India, which are among the developing nations exempted from the
protocol’s mandatory emissions reductions. However, developing nations are projected to produce half
the world’s greenhouse gases by 2035. Leaders of these nations argue that emissions controls are a
costly hindrance to economic development. In the past, prosperity and pollution have tended to go
together, as industrialization has always been a necessary component of an economy’s development.
Whether or not an economy can grow without increasing greenhouse gas emissions at the same time
is a question that will be critical as nations such as China and India continue on the path of
industrialization.

In 2007 the European Union (EU) took the initiative in coming up with a new international plan to
address global warming. At a “green summit” held in March, the 27 nations of the EU reached a
landmark accord that went above and beyond the Kyōto Protocol in setting targets to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions. The agreement set ambitious targets for the EU overall, but goals for
individual EU nations and rules of enforcement were to be determined through additional negotiations.

In the accord EU leaders agreed to reduce emissions by 20 percent from 1990 levels by 2020—or by
as much as 30 percent if nations outside the EU joined in the commitments. They also agreed that
renewable sources of energy, such as solar and wind power, would make up 20 percent of overall EU
energy consumption by 2020 (an increase of about 14 percent). The accord also called for a 10
percent increase in the use of plant-derived fuels, such as biodiesel and ethanol. In addition to these
targets, EU leaders agreed to work out a plan to promote energy-saving fluorescent light bulbs,
following the example of countries such as Australia and Chile that are officially phasing out less-
efficient incandescent light bulbs.
D Programs in the United States

At a national level, the United States has so far relied on voluntary programs to reduce emissions. For
example, the Department of Energy, the Environmental Protection Agency, product manufacturers,
local utilities, and retailers have collaborated to implement the Energy Star program. This program
rates appliances for energy use and gives some money back to consumers who buy efficient
machines.

The U.S. government has also focused on targets for greenhouse gas intensity, which is the ratio of
emissions per unit of economic output. For the economy as a whole, greenhouse gas intensity is
usually expressed as emissions per dollar of gross domestic product (GDP). Greenhouse gas intensity
targets contrast with absolute targets, which limit total emissions (as in the Kyōto Protocol).
Greenhouse gas intensity can decline even when total emissions rise. In other words, if the economy
grows faster than emissions, greenhouse gas intensity goes down while the total amount of emissions
goes up. This has already been the trend in the past few decades in the United States. Emissions
intensity has decreased due to improvements in energy efficiency and rapid economic growth in
relatively clean sectors, such as information technology and services. However, total U.S. emissions
have grown steadily. For example, the emissions intensity of carbon dioxide in the United States
decreased by 17 percent from 1990 to 2002, even as total carbon dioxide emissions grew by 18
percent over the same period. This trend of decreasing emissions intensity is expected to continue in
the future.

In 2007 the U.S. Supreme Court issued a landmark environmental ruling—and its first relating to the
issue of global warming—that greenhouse gases are air pollutants as defined by the Clean Air Act. The
court also ordered the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to reevaluate its policy of not regulating
carbon dioxide emissions from automobiles. The lawsuit, Massachusetts et al. v. Environmental
Protection Agency et al., was filed against the EPA by 12 states and 13 environmental groups that had
grown frustrated with the agency’s inaction on global warming issues.

Apart from the national government, many state and local governments are also working to curb
greenhouse gas emissions. In 2005 three major initiatives were announced. First, the government of
California committed to return to 1990 levels by 2020, and reduce emissions 80 percent below 1990
levels by 2050. Second, seven Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic states established the Regional
Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a mandatory program to limit emissions from power plants (while allowing
emitters to trade allocations). Third, the mayor of Seattle announced the Climate Protection Initiative,
committing Seattle to meet the original Kyōto Protocol target for the United States (before it withdrew
support for the treaty) of 7 percent reductions below 1990 levels. Since then, hundreds of other city
mayors representing about 50 million Americans have committed to this initiative.

Individuals, too, can take steps to curb their own emissions. The same choices that reduce other kinds
of pollution work against greenhouse gases. Every time a consumer buys an energy-efficient
appliance, uses energy-saving light bulbs, adds insulation to a house, recycles materials, chooses to
live near work, or commutes by public transportation, he or she is fighting global warming.

Contributed By:
Michael Mastrandrea
Stephen H. Schneider
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

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