Speaking Time
Speaking Time
Speaking Time
On a baby yoda’s
scale. How are you
feeling today?
CLIMATE ACTION TRACKER
1.What did countries agree to on the 2015 Paris
Agreement?
2. What is needed to meet this 1.5 warming limit?
3. What is the Climate Action Tracker?
4. Which national governments have adopted net
zero targets?
DISCUSSION 5. What happens when countries re-submit the
same target or offer different ones?
TIME 6. What is the case of Brazil?
7. What does the video imply in the end?
8. Do you think it is possible to cut our emissions?
Why (not)?
▪ The Science of Climate
Change Explained: Facts,
Evidence and Proof.
Earth’s climate is inherently variable. So how can scientists look at data collected over a relatively
short period of time and conclude that humans are warming the planet?
Historical records stretch back to the 1880s (and often before), when people began to regularly
measure temperatures. These data show a clear warming trend during the 20th century.
Some have questioned whether these records could be skewed, for instance, by the fact that a
disproportionate number of weather stations are near cities, which tend to be hotter than
surrounding areas as a result of the so-called urban heat island effect. However, researchers
regularly correct for these potential biases when reconstructing global temperatures. In addition,
warming is corroborated by independent data like satellite observations, which cover the whole
planet, and other ways of measuring temperature changes.
Much has also been made of the small dips and pauses that punctuate the rising temperature
trend of the last 150 years. But these are just the result of natural climate variability or other
human activities that temporarily counteract greenhouse warming. For instance, in the mid-
1900s, internal climate dynamics and light-blocking pollution from coal-fired power plants halted
global warming for a few decades. Likewise, the so-called warming hiatus of the 2000s was
partly a result of natural climate variability that allowed more heat to enter the ocean rather than
warm the atmosphere. The years since have been the hottest on record.
The resulting picture of global temperature change is basically flat for centuries, then turns
sharply upward over the last 150 years. It has been a target of climate denialists for decades.
However, study after study has confirmed the results, which show that the planet hasn’t been this
hot in at least 1,000 years, and probably longer.
Scientists have studied past climate changes to understand the factors that can cause the planet
to warm or cool. The big ones are changes in solar energy, ocean circulation, volcanic activity
and the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. And they have each played a role at
times.
For example, 300 years ago, a combination of reduced solar output and increased volcanic
activity cooled parts of the planet enough that Londoners regularly ice skated on the Thames.
About 12,000 years ago, major changes in Atlantic circulation plunged the Northern Hemisphere
into a frigid state. And 56 million years ago, a giant burst of greenhouse gases, from volcanic
activity or vast deposits of methane (or both), abruptly warmed the planet by at least 9 degrees
Fahrenheit.
That warming is best explained by rising greenhouse gas concentrations. Greenhouse gases
have a powerful effect on climate. And since the Industrial Revolution, humans have been adding
more of them to the atmosphere, primarily by extracting and burning fossil fuels like coal, oil and
gas, which releases carbon dioxide
These rapid increases in greenhouse gases have caused the climate to warm abruptly. A study
put it this way: The odds of current warming occurring without anthropogenic greenhouse gas
emissions are less than 1 in 100,000.
One of the most common arguments against taking aggressive action to combat climate change
is that doing so will kill jobs and cripple the economy. But this implies that there’s an alternative
in which we pay nothing for climate change. And unfortunately, there isn’t. In reality, not tackling
climate change will cost a lot.
Let’s start with how much it will cost to address climate change. To keep warming well below 2
degrees Celsius society will have to reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. That will
require significant investments in things like renewable energy, electric cars and charging
infrastructure, not to mention efforts to adapt to hotter temperatures, rising sea-levels and other
unavoidable effects.
Estimates of the cost vary widely. One recent study found that keeping warming to 2 degrees
Celsius would require a total investment of between $4 trillion and $60 trillion, with a median
estimate of $16 trillion, while keeping warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius could cost between $10
trillion and $100 trillion, with a median estimate of $30 trillion. (For reference, the entire world
economy was about $88 trillion in 2019.)
Nevertheless, climate damages are hard to quantify. Moody’s Analytics estimates that even 2
degrees Celsius of warming will cost the world $69 trillion by 2100, and economists expect the
toll to keep rising with the temperature. Other research indicates that, if current warming trends
continue, global G.D.P. per capita will decrease between 7 percent and 23 percent by the end of
the century — an economic blow equivalent to multiple coronavirus pandemics every year.
Many economists say that addressing climate change is a better deal. It’s like that old saying: an
ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. In this case, limiting warming will greatly reduce
future damage and inequality caused by climate change. And, of course, reining in climate
change will spare many species and ecosystems upon which humans depend on.
1. How do we know climate change is caused by humans?
3.WHAT DO YOU DO IN YOUR DAILY LIFE THAT MIGHT INCREASE GLOBAL WARMING?
8.DOES YOUR LOCAL GOVERNMENT MAKE IT EASY OR HARD FOR CITIZENS TO RECYCLE?
10.
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF PEOPLE WHO SMOKE CIGARETTES INDOORS?