climate change report

It is now indisputable fact that the Earth has warmed by 0.74°C over the last hundred years, with 0.4°C of this occurring since the 1970s and the majority of scientific bodies now agree that climate change is a genuine and major issue, possibly the greatest environmental challenge that modern civilisation has faced.
The latest report (the Fourth Assessment Report) from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) leaves little doubt that human activity is the main cause of these changes. At present more than 7 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide are emitted each year through global fossil fuel use, with a further 1.6 billion tonnes emitted by change in land use, mainly deforestation. The concentration of green house gases in the atmosphere has reached 430ppm CO2 equivalent – a level not seen for tens of thousands of years.
The Fourth Assessment Report from the IPCC states that mean global temperatures are likely to rise between 1.1°C and 6.4°C above 1990 levels by the end of this century, depending on our emissions. This increase in temperature will result in a further rise in world sea levels of between 20 and 60cm, also by the end of the century. Ice caps, glaciers and sea ice will continue to melt, rainfall patterns will change and tropical cyclones will intensify. Across the globe there will be more extreme heat waves, droughts and flooding. Food shortages as arable land becomes unusable and the spread of diseases such as malaria are frequently predicted. There could be severe water shortages as well, with groundwater suffering from salination as sea levels rise.
Governments, businesses and individuals all need to act together to secure our future on the planet.
Sources:
• UK Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs – DEFRA
• Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change – IPCC
• ‘Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change’ – Sir Nicholas Stern, Head of the UK Government Economic Service, October 2006
• US National Center for Atmospheric Research – NCAR
About the Author:
For more information and insight into climate change, carbon offsets and energy – or simply to download the Spanish feed in tariffs visit our educational climate site here: http://hotclimate.wikidot.com
Article Source: ArticlesBase.com – Evidence and Effects of Climate Change
Al Gore and Jonas Gahr Støre Present Report on Melting Ice at COP15
|
|
Cellphone Journalism
$12.50 In the year 2010, there are said to be over 2.5 billion cell phones. The following movie was shot entirely with just one of the many cell phones that are used every day. No special computer, nor effects where used. Eight stories without pause, from, Graphitti on the edge of the Power Houses, Islam in South America, Japanese Gardens, Martial Arts and interview with master of the art, Chinese Marke... |
|
|
Factor Five: Transforming the Global Economy through 80% Improvements in Resource Productivity
$30.00 When first published in 1997, Factor Four: Doubling Wealth, Halving Resource Use by renowned economic and engineering experts Ernst von Weizs�cker, Amory Lovins and L. Hunter Lovins, transformed how economists, policy makers, engineers, entrepreneurs and business leaders thought about innovation and wealth creation. Through examples from a wide range of industrial sectors, the authors demonstrat... |
|
|
Prosperity without Growth: Economics for a Finite Planet
$59.40 Is more economic growth the solution? Will it deliver prosperity and well-being for a global population projected to reach nine billion? In this explosive book, Tim Jackson, a top sustainability adviser to the UK government, makes a compelling case against continued economic growth in developed nations. No one denies that development is essential for poorer nations. But in the advanced economies ... |
|
|
Global Warming: A Very Short Introduction
$1.35 Global Warming: A Very Short Introduction is an informative, up to date discussion about the predicted impacts of global warming. It draws on material from the recent report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a huge collaborative study drawing together current thinking on the subject from experts in a range of disciplines, and presents the findings of the panel for a general readers... |

