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Glaciers are melting, sea levels are rising, cloud forests
are drying, and wildlife is scrambling to keep pace. It's becoming clear that
humans have caused most of the past century's warming by releasing
heat-trapping gases as we power our modern lives. Called greenhouse gases,
their levels are higher now than in the last 650,000 years.
We call the result global warming, but it is causing a set
of changes to the Earth's climate, or long-term weather patterns, that varies
from place to place. As the Earth spins each day, the new heat swirls with it,
picking up moisture over the oceans, rising here, settling there. It's changing
the rhythms of climate that all living things have come to rely upon.
What will we do to slow this warming? How will we cope
with the changes we've already set into motion? While we struggle to figure it
all out, the face of the Earth as we know it—coasts, forests, farms and
snow-capped mountains—hangs in the balance.
Greenhouse effect
The "greenhouse effect" is the warming that
happens when certain gases in Earth's atmosphere trap heat. These gases let in
light but keep heat from escaping, like the glass walls of a greenhouse.
First, sunlight shines onto the Earth's surface, where it
is absorbed and then radiates back into the atmosphere as heat. In the
atmosphere, “greenhouse” gases trap some of this heat, and the rest escapes
into space. The more greenhouse gases are in the atmosphere, the more heat gets
trapped.
Scientists have known about the greenhouse effect since
1824, when Joseph Fourier calculated that the Earth would be much colder if it
had no atmosphere. This greenhouse effect is what keeps the Earth's climate
livable. Without it, the Earth's surface would be an average of about 60
degrees Fahrenheit cooler. In 1895, the Swedish chemist Svante Arrhenius
discovered that humans could enhance the greenhouse effect by making carbon
dioxide, a greenhouse gas. He kicked off 100 years of climate research that has
given us a sophisticated understanding of global warming.
Levels of greenhouse gases (GHGs) have gone up and down
over the Earth's history, but they have been fairly constant for the past few
thousand years. Global average temperatures have stayed fairly constant over
that time as well, until recently. Through the burning of fossil fuels and
other GHG emissions, humans are enhancing the greenhouse effect and warming
Earth.
Scientists often use the term "climate change"
instead of global warming. This is because as the Earth's average temperature
climbs, winds and ocean currents move heat around the globe in ways that can
cool some areas, warm others, and change the amount of rain and snow falling.
As a result, the climate changes differently in different areas.
Aren't temperature changes
natural?
The average global temperature and concentrations of
carbon dioxide (one of the major greenhouse gases) have fluctuated on a cycle
of hundreds of thousands of years as the Earth's position relative to the sun
has varied. As a result, ice ages have come and gone.
However, for thousands of years now, emissions of GHGs to
the atmosphere have been balanced out by GHGs that are naturally
absorbed. As a result, GHG concentrations and temperature have been
fairly stable. This stability has allowed human civilization to develop within
a consistent climate.
Occasionally, other factors briefly influence global
temperatures. Volcanic eruptions, for example, emit particles that
temporarily cool the Earth's surface. But these have no lasting effect
beyond a few years. Other cycles, such as El Niño, also work on fairly short
and predictable cycles.
Now, humans have increased the amount of carbon dioxide in
the atmosphere by more than a third since the industrial revolution. Changes
this large have historically taken thousands of years, but are now happening
over the course of decades.
Why is this a concern?
The rapid rise in greenhouse gases is a problem because it
is changing the climate faster than some living things may be able to adapt.
Also, a new and more unpredictable climate poses unique challenges to all life.
Historically, Earth's climate has regularly shifted back
and forth between temperatures like those we see today and temperatures cold
enough that large sheets of ice covered much of North America and Europe. The difference
between average global temperatures today and during those ice ages is only
about 5 degrees Celsius (9 degrees Fahrenheit), and these swings happen slowly,
over hundreds of thousands of years.
Now, with concentrations of greenhouse gases rising,
Earth's remaining ice sheets (such as Greenland and Antarctica) are starting to
melt too. The extra water could potentially raise sea levels significantly.
As the mercury rises, the climate can change in unexpected
ways. In addition to sea levels rising, weather can become more extreme. This
means more intense major storms, more rain followed by longer and drier
droughts (a challenge for growing crops), changes in the ranges in which plants
and animals can live, and loss of water supplies that have historically come
from glaciers.
Scientists are already seeing some of these changes
occurring more quickly than they had expected. According to the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, eleven of the twelve hottest years
since thermometer readings became available occurred between 1995 and 2006.
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