http://www.economist.com/blogs/economist-explains/2014/11/economist-explains?fsrc=nlw|newe|3-11-2014|
The
Economist explains
Nov 2nd 2014, 23:50 by J.P.
ON NOVEMBER 2ND the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which represents mainstream
scientific opinion, said that it was extremely likely that climate change is the
product of human activity. Extremely likely in IPCC speak means having a
probability of over 95%. The claim forms part of its fifth assessment on the
state of the global climate. In its first assessment, in 1990, the IPCC had said
that "the observed increase [in air temperatures] could be largely due to
natural variability." Why have climate scientists become so much more certain
that climate change is man-made, not natural?
Many factors influence the
climate but perhaps the single most important is carbon dioxide (CO₂). CO₂
absorbs infra-red heat at a constant rate and at a higher rate than nitrogen and
oxygen—the main constituent parts of the atmosphere—so the more CO₂ in the air,
the more the atmosphere will tend to warm up. Scientists attribute climate
change to human activity mainly because people have been responsible for large
increases in CO₂. At the start of the industrial revolution, in about 1800,
there were 280 parts per million (ppm) of CO₂ in the atmosphere. That had been
the level for most of human history. This year, however, concentrations exceeded
400 ppm, the first time it had reached that level for a million
years.
Most of the increase has been caused by people burning fossil
fuels. In the United States, for example, 38% of the CO₂ produced in 2012 came
from generating electricity and 32% came from vehicle emissions (the rest came
from industrial processes, buildings and other smaller CO₂ production). People
also produce CO₂ when they cut down forests for farmland and pasture. But the
rate at which CO₂ absorbs heat—which has been established accurately in
laboratories—does not explain all the increase in global temperatures. If CO₂
concentrations were to double from 1800 levels, global temperatures would rise
by roughly 1°C. But there are many other influences upon the
climate.
Rising CO₂ levels directly influence other phenomena, such as
clouds, which amplify or sometimes diminish the increase in temperatures. Adding
soot and other aerosols (fine particles suspended in the air) further adds to,
or subtracts from, the effect of CO₂. As a result, the Earth’s temperature will
in practice warm up by more than 1°C for each doubling of CO₂ concentrations.
All climate scientists agree on that. How much more, though, is a matter of
scientific dispute. In practice, too, the increase in global surface air
temperatures has been smaller than climate computer models had predicted. But
what is no longer seriously disputed is that humans are the main agents of
climate change.
Dig deeper:
Our guide to the actions that have done
the most to slow global warming (Sept 2014)
The quickest way to cut
greenhouse gases is to expand the Montreal protocol (Sept 2014)
A 2015 UN
climate agreement is possible, but it will not be bold (Sept
2014)
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