Feature: Eye on Global Warming
By: Rabia
Yousaf
Throughout its long history, Earth
has warmed and cooled time and again. Climate has changed when the planet
received more or less sunlight due to subtle shifts in its orbit, as the
atmosphere or surface changed, or when the Sun’s energy varied. But in the past
century, another force has started to influence Earth’s climate: humanity
What is Global Warming?
How Does
Today’s Warming Compare to Past Climate Change?
Earth has experienced climate change in the past
without help from humanity. But the current climatic warming is occurring much
more rapidly than past warming events.
Why Do
Scientists Think Current Warming Isn’t Natural?
In Earth’s history before the Industrial
Revolution, Earth’s climate changed due to natural causes unrelated to human
activity. These natural causes are still in play today, but their influence is
too small or they occur too slowly to explain the rapid warming seen in recent
decades.
How Much
More Will Earth Warm?
Models predict that as the world consumes ever
more fossil fuel, greenhouse gas concentrations will continue to rise, and
Earth’s average surface temperature will rise with them. Based on plausible
emission scenarios, average surface temperatures could rise between 2°C and 6°C
by the end of the 21st century. Some of this warming will occur even if future
greenhouse gas emissions are reduced, because the Earth system has not yet
fully adjusted to environmental changes we have already made.
How Will
Earth Respond to Warming Temperatures?
The impact of global warming is far greater than
just increasing temperatures. Warming modifies rainfall patterns, amplifies
coastal erosion, lengthens the growing season in some regions, melts ice caps
and glaciers, and alters the ranges of some infectious diseases. Some of these
changes are already occurring.
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