• Global warming is a synonym for climate change, though " climate change " has become the preferred term among scientists. (livescience.com)
  • Unfortunately, the scientists say, the warmer temperatures still portend an increase in the percentage of intense hurricanes. (popsci.com)
  • But scientists say that in a warming world, the likelihood of wildfires like the ones tearing across Southern California is definitely higher. (livescience.com)
  • 1,700 British scientists have signed a statement put out by the Met Office declaring that they have the "utmost confidence" in the science behind climate change. (mongabay.com)
  • 01/22/2009) A new poll among 3,146 earth scientists found that 90 percent believe global warming is real, while 82 percent agree that human activity been a significant factor in changing mean global temperatures. (mongabay.com)
  • That same century, scientists identified carbon dioxide's potential to increase global temperatures , which at the time was considered a possible benefit to the planet. (newscientist.com)
  • Maybe Dr. Holdren thinks that "global warming" is now "dangerous" for the corrupt politicized faux scientists who have built their careers on ecological hobgoblins? (americanthinker.com)
  • After the biggest fraud in the history of science, it will take years for scientists to recover their good names -- and that's assuming they cut out the cancer fast, before it spreads. (americanthinker.com)
  • In a recent interview , leading climate scientist Stephen H. Schneider commented that the skeptics "have very few mainstream climate scientists who publish original research in climate refereed journals with them -- a petroleum geologist's opinion on climate science is a as good as a climate scientist's opinion on oil reserves. (prwatch.org)
  • The [fraudulent] report claimed that the 'pause' or 'slowdown' in global warming in the period since 1998 - revealed by UN scientists in 2013 - never existed, and that world temperatures had been rising faster than scientists expected. (activistpost.com)
  • Scientists tell us that global warming will, at worst, be hurricane-neutral. (heartland.org)
  • According to scientists whose study was published in Nature Climate Change this week, the strength of winds that push colder air towards the equator has increased over the past two decades, forcing more heat into the ocean, and that this can explain why global warming appears to have stopped. (spiked-online.com)
  • Global temperatures predicted for the coming centuries may trigger a new 'mass extinction event', where over 50 per cent of animal and plant species would be wiped out, warn scientists at the Universities of York and Leeds. (science20.com)
  • At Science 2.0, scientists are the journalists, with no political bias or editorial control. (science20.com)
  • SCIENTISTS are planning the REVERSE the effects of global warming by releasing chemicals to dim the Sun into the Earth's atmosphere using balloons or large naval-style guns. (express.co.uk)
  • Atmospheric scientists have uncovered fresh evidence to support the hotly debated theory that global warming has contributed to the emergence of stronger hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean. (science20.com)
  • Scientists project that global warming could affect the frequency, timing, location and severity of many types of extreme weather events in the decades to come. (environmentamerica.org)
  • Scientists project that global warming may bring fewer - but more intense - hurricanes worldwide, and that those hurricanes will bring increased precipitation. (environmentamerica.org)
  • Many scientists believe that the main factor influencing changes in the Earth's temperature is the Sun. Several European and American scientists say that data from the European Space Agency's Soho satellite and other astronomical data show that the Sun, not Man's burning of fossil fuels, is the main cause of the global warming that occurred between 1850 and the mid-20th century. (nationalcenter.org)
  • Scientists specializing in solar research say earlier computer models that were used to make dramatic claims about theorized human-induced warming severely underestimated the increase in the amount of energy radiated by the Sun over the last 150 years. (nationalcenter.org)
  • You'll begin by understanding how science really works and progresses, and why scientists sometimes disagree. (informit.com)
  • Global warming is the rise in average temperatures across the globe, which has been ongoing at least since record keeping began in 1880. (livescience.com)
  • Many global warming proponents - including Al Gore - have suggested a link between rising temperatures and more frequent and powerful El Ninos - which they speculate could spawn more and stronger hurricanes. (foxnews.com)
  • David Ridenour of The National Center for Public Policy Research says people who claim rising temperatures will lead to more intense hurricanes "appear to be relying upon political science, not climate science. (foxnews.com)
  • A new article co-authored by the other of us (Michael Mann), shows that natural ocean oscillations have recently acted to temporarily slow the warming of the Earth's surface temperatures, in combination with a relatively quiet sun, and active volcanoes. (skepticalscience.com)
  • Since the mid twentieth century the uncertainties in global and hemispheric mean temperatures are small, and the temperature increase greatly exceeds its uncertainty. (scienceblogs.com)
  • The revised data will show both lower temperatures and a slower rate in the recent warming trend. (activistpost.com)
  • It is likely the current warming slowdown is only a temporary reprieve from brisk increases in global temperatures. (spiked-online.com)
  • Moreover, future predicted temperatures are within the range of the warmest greenhouse phases that are associated with mass extinction events identified in the fossil record. (science20.com)
  • Kossin and his colleagues realized they needed to smooth out the data before exploring any interplay between warmer temperatures and hurricane activity. (science20.com)
  • Once the NCDC researchers recalibrated the hurricane figures, Kossin took a fresh look at how the new numbers on hurricane strength correlate with records on warming ocean temperatures, a side effect of global warming. (science20.com)
  • While we can see a correlation between global warming and hurricane strength, we still need to understand exactly why the Atlantic is reacting to warmer temperatures in this way, and that is much more difficult to do," says Kossin. (science20.com)
  • Temperatures are projected to rise by as much as an additional 7° F to 11° F on average by the end of the century, should emissions of global warming pollutants continue to increase. (environmentamerica.org)
  • With shifting temperatures, fungi may be evolving (changing and adapting) to live in warmer conditions, including the human body. (cdc.gov)
  • In Columbia, El Niño events (caused by warming sea surface temperatures in the central tropical Pacific) are associated with warmer temperatures, higher dew points, and less precipitation and river discharge. (cdc.gov)
  • The wild hypothesis of "catastrophic anthropogenic global warming a hundred years from now," is so obviously harebrained sci-fi that no sane person can believe in it. (americanthinker.com)
  • we caution that the shifts described here are presumably superimposed upon a long term warming trend due to anthropogenic forcing. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Just because we've been unable to see a signal of climate change in property damage trends is no reason to question the science behind anthropogenic global warming. (scienceblogs.com)
  • So what about anthropogenic global warming (AGW)? (scienceinschool.org)
  • 2. If one assumes all warming over the past century is due to anthropogenic greenhouse forcing, then the derived sensitivity of the climate to a doubling of CO2is less than 1C. (theunbrokenwindow.com)
  • The global warming potency of methane means that it traps in heat more effectively than CO2, despite staying in the atmosphere for a shorter period of time (Reisinger & Clark, 2018). (umass.edu)
  • We, and most other living things, reside on Earth's surface, and the data tell us that surface warming continues unabated. (skepticalscience.com)
  • Global sea level is currently projected to rise by as much as 2.5 to 6.25 feet by the end of the century if global warming pollution continues unabated. (environmentamerica.org)
  • Modern global warming is caused by humans. (livescience.com)
  • The faux pause has nonetheless been used by political partisans like Senator Cruz to cast doubt on the overwhelming scientific consensus that humans are causing rapid global warming, simply because they find the political implications of that scientific reality inconvenient - to their ideological views and the views of the special interests who fund their campaigns. (skepticalscience.com)
  • A new survey of over 12,000 peer-reviewed climate science papers by our citizen science team at Skeptical Science has found a 97% consensus among papers taking a position on the cause of global warming in the peer-reviewed literature that humans are responsible. (skepticalscience.com)
  • there is no reason to expect global warming to continue indefinitely unless humans are causing it. (skepticalscience.com)
  • This result isn't surprising for two reasons: 1) most journals have strict word limits for their abstracts, and 2) frankly, every scientist doing climate research knows humans are causing global warming. (skepticalscience.com)
  • Inside Science) -- In the 1999 movie The Matrix, humans darkened the sky to try to starve off the solar powered robots that were threatening to take over the world. (insidescience.org)
  • Humans continue to amplify global warming by emitting billions of tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere each year. (vims.edu)
  • I don't know the first damn thing about global warming outside of the fact that it has gotten warmer and that humans have tossed a helluva lot of CO2 into the air. (theunbrokenwindow.com)
  • Just masses and masses of basalt poured out into the surface of the Earth, pumping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and it actually warmed the Earth up so much. (thenakedscientists.com)
  • And it wiped out 97 per cent of the species on the planet, this global warming event because the carbon dioxide was pumping into the atmosphere so fast that the normal drawdown procedures just got completely swamped. (thenakedscientists.com)
  • Simple models based on the warming impact of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere match historical changes in temperature . (newscientist.com)
  • Complex climate models, recently acknowledged in the Nobel Prize for Physics , not only indicate a warming of the Earth due to increases in carbon dioxide but also offer details of the areas of greatest warming . (newscientist.com)
  • And supposedly, one of the cures for global warming is to " repower " America with zero-carbon energy, especially electricity generated from wind turbines. (globalwarming.org)
  • The ad featured a CO 2 Coalition graph that matched satellite temperature data from 1978-2021 with the record of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide, which is compiled at the Mauna Loa (Hawaii) Observatory of NOAA's Global Monitoring Laboratory. (bibliotecapleyades.net)
  • The target of these assaults is our communications countering the false narrative of a climate emergency rooted in the warming effect of carbon dioxide, which in fact is a beneficial gas essential to life on Earth. (bibliotecapleyades.net)
  • Why isn't the carbon dioxide from breathing a concern for global warming? (mcgill.ca)
  • The carbon dioxide we exhale does not contribute to global warming for the simple reason that we also take up an equivalent amount of carbon dioxide from the air, albeit indirectly. (mcgill.ca)
  • Clearly then, by living and breathing we are not contributing to global warming through the release of carbon dioxide. (mcgill.ca)
  • Negotiated by the Clinton Administration in December 1997, the Kyoto treaty would have required the United States and other major industrialized nations to make economically-drastic reductions in carbon dioxide emissions to combat the alleged threat of man-made global warming. (nationalcenter.org)
  • An article that appeared this year in the science magazine Nature shows that, in numerous instances throughout Earth's geological history, increases and decreases in carbon dioxide were not followed by respective increases or decreases in global temperature. (nationalcenter.org)
  • A new study reveals that a distant human relative plays an outsize role in damping the impacts of this greenhouse gas by pumping large amounts of carbon from the ocean surface to the deep sea, where it contributes nothing to current warming. (vims.edu)
  • The reported trends indicate that global warming is possibly inducing an incipient change on regional fire dynamics towards increased fire impacts in Europe , suggesting that emerging risks posed by exceptional fire - weather danger conditions may progressively exceed current wildfire suppression capabilities in the next decades and impact forest carbon sinks . (bvsalud.org)
  • Carbon dioxide, emitted mainly by combustion of fossil fuels, is harmful to the climate and the main reason for increased global warming. (lu.se)
  • The first part covers the psychology of global warming denial, how to defend ourselves against its lies and fake news, and how to convince others of global warming's grave harm. (benthamscience.com)
  • The Heartland Institute, which is known for its global warming denial, arranged for the distribution of free copies to elected officials. (wikipedia.org)
  • Last Friday, in light of the stolen emails, the IPCC also released a statement that said it stood behind its decades-long work on climate change science. (mongabay.com)
  • All IPCC definitions taken from Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. (skepticalscience.com)
  • According to the Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the global mean temperature, estimated from thousands of individual thermometers scattered around the globe, has increased by 0.74 ± 0.18 ºC over the past 100 years, and appears to be rising still. (scienceinschool.org)
  • All models project more warming, because, within models, there are positive feedbacks from water vapor and clouds, and these feedbacks are considered by the IPCC to be uncertain. (theunbrokenwindow.com)
  • Given the above, the notion that alarming warming is 'settled science' should be offensive to any sentient individual, though to be sure, the above is hardly emphasized by the IPCC. (theunbrokenwindow.com)
  • Hmm, that kind of confirms what critics have been saying for years, that the IPCC has nothing to do with science. (theunbrokenwindow.com)
  • IPCC Special Report on the impacts of global warming of 1.5°C above pre- industrial levels and related global greenhouse gas emission pathways, in the context of strengthening the global response to the threat of climate change, sustainable development, and efforts to eradicate poverty. (lu.se)
  • Global warming is the gradual heating of the planet's surface, oceans and atmosphere. (livescience.com)
  • Also noted on the graph is the occurrence of El Ni o, a phenomenon of ocean currents known to warm the atmosphere. (bibliotecapleyades.net)
  • Today, the scientific consensus is just as solid that the planet is warming rapidly, the CO2 levels in our atmosphere are rising rapidly, and human activity is causing it as medical evidence against tobacco use was back then. (fluther.com)
  • This contradicts the prediction of global warming theory proponents that global warming would cause the temperature to increase by 0.6°F between 1979 and 2000.6 Casting further doubt on the prognostications of global warming theorists is that satellite data show that, during 1999 and 2000, the lower atmosphere over the tropics was cooler than at any other time in the past 22 years. (nationalcenter.org)
  • But the removal and reduction of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere is still the most viable and reliable solution to combat global warming. (insidescience.org)
  • Robert De Saro , " A Crisis like No Other: Understanding and Defeating Global Warming ", Bentham Science Publishers (2023). (benthamscience.com)
  • At that time, the Arctic was ice-free for at least part of the year and significantly warmer than it is today, according to 2013 research published in the journal Science . (livescience.com)
  • A new study funded by the National Science Foundation finds that global warming will not significantly change America's wind patterns over the next 50 years. (globalwarming.org)
  • Both beef and dairy cattle emit high amounts of enteric methane that contribute significantly to global warming. (umass.edu)
  • Regarding the question of whether global warming has been significantly affected by the consumption of hydrocarbons to fuel US prosperity, I have read much and remain a show-me skeptic. (theunbrokenwindow.com)
  • 2015). The dairy and beef consumption in the United States directly relates to global warming due to methane emissions that occur as a byproduct of this industry (Hovhannisyan & Grigoryan, 2016). (umass.edu)
  • Climate change and global warming change weather patterns and disrupt both natural and economic systems ( Denchak, 2016). (umass.edu)
  • The real science and economics of climate change support the view that global warming is not a crisis and that immediate action to reduce emissions is not necessary," they claim. (prwatch.org)
  • Regarding "Emissions must be cut, Gov. Crist tells climate change summit" (July 12), Charlie Crist is doing Floridians a grave disservice by misrepresenting the science regarding global warming. (heartland.org)
  • To protect the nation from the damage to property and ecosystems that results from changes in extreme weather patterns - as well as other consequences of global warming - the United States must move quickly to reduce emissions of global warming pollutants. (environmentamerica.org)
  • The consequences of global warming are already beginning to be experienced in the United States, and are likely to grow in the years to come, particularly if emissions of global warming pollutants continue unabated. (environmentamerica.org)
  • If we lower the rate of enteric methane emissions by cattle then we lower the rate of global warming. (umass.edu)
  • Unstoppable Global Warming: Every 1,500 Years is a book about climate change, written by Siegfried Fred Singer and Dennis T. Avery, which asserts that natural changes, and not CO2 emissions, are the cause of global warming. (wikipedia.org)
  • Over sixteen chapters the authors present their view of the natural cycles in the earth's climate and argue that the current warming period is not caused by man-made greenhouse gas emissions. (wikipedia.org)
  • We see stark evidence of global warming all around us in receding glaciers , melting Arctic sea ice , and the increase in number and intensity of extreme weather events . (fluther.com)
  • The global mean sea level is increasing, both due to the fact that warmer water has greater volume and because glaciers have melted. (scienceinschool.org)
  • To no one's surprise, Facebook continues to reject any and all scientific data that does not support their 'consensus' narrative of man-made 'catastrophic' warming by rejecting an ad placed by the CO 2 Coalition, Arlington, Virginia. (bibliotecapleyades.net)
  • Reports up to 6° C increase in winter temps since 1966 in large areas of Siberia and North America, lesser amount in summer, but the warming in winter can slowly increase temp of permafrost, making it easier to thaw into the active layer. (worldviewofglobalwarming.org)
  • The so-called 'pause' in the rate of global warming is false and distracting. (skepticalscience.com)
  • Yet a purported global warming 'pause' (more aptly named the 'faux pause' ) is often used as an excuse by those who oppose taking action to curb climate change. (skepticalscience.com)
  • A recent fraudulent study that claimed the uncomfortable "pause" in warming was really no pause at all. (activistpost.com)
  • We performed a keyword search of peer-reviewed scientific journal publications (in the ISI Web of Science) for the terms 'global warming' and 'global climate change' between the years 1991 and 2011, which returned over 12,000 papers. (skepticalscience.com)
  • I'm an atmospheric scientist who has worked on global climate science and assessments for most of my career. (newscientist.com)
  • Dana Nuccitelli is an environmental scientist and climate blogger for Skeptical Science and The Guardian . (skepticalscience.com)
  • Science is nothing without truth-telling and honesty, and you're no scientist. (americanthinker.com)
  • A highly respected, medal-winning climate scientist just wound up and threw a giant monkey wrench into global warming science. (activistpost.com)
  • Women inspired my science career, including Silent Spring author and marine scientist Rachel Carson and cytogeneticist Barbara McClintock, whose groundbreaking work on "jumping genes" opened my eyes. (comoxvalleyrecord.com)
  • Reduced ocean memory along with increased random fluctuations suggest intrinsic changes in the system and new challenges in prediction under warming," said Fei-Fei Jin, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa and co-author of the research. (nsf.gov)
  • AS A POLITICAL SCIENTIST , Angela Oels studies how the framing of an issue influences global political decisions. (lu.se)
  • Paul Aasen, executive director of the Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy, said that scientific consensus is that global warming is due in large part to human activity. (mprnews.org)
  • It's not surprising that the warming effects of climate change can be beneficial for a cold country like Iceland," says Tómas Jóhannesson, a geophysicist at the Icelandic Meteorological Office. (popsci.com)
  • President Bush outlined his global warming initiatives today, which include calling for more scientific research to understand the basic dynamics and effects of climate change, as a recent report by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) made clear is necessary. (cei.org)
  • The basic physics of the greenhouse effect were figured out more than a hundred years ago by a smart guy using only pencil and paper," Josef Werne, a professor of geology and environmental science at the University of Pittsburgh, told Live Science. (livescience.com)
  • Over the past 17 years, the Earth has warmed rapidly, accumulating energy at a rate equivalent to more than four atomic bomb detonations per second . (skepticalscience.com)
  • In particular, satellite data demonstrate for the last 17 years, there's been zero warming. (skepticalscience.com)
  • That way, some wildly overpaid, "internationally respected" climate modeler can predict that in a hundred years, things will get two degrees warmer, colder, or neither one nor the other and still predict the end of the earth. (americanthinker.com)
  • They can see people dying on the streets in Calcutta, but they can't see two degrees warmer in a hundred years being such a big deal. (americanthinker.com)
  • But when the Heartland Institute talks about "real science," it is hard to ignore the fact that for years they have defended the policy agenda of the tobacco industry without disclosing that they were funded by Phillip Morris . (prwatch.org)
  • Additionally, in my 50 years on this earth, I HAVE seen a demonstrable warming trend where i live. (prwatch.org)
  • Indeed, in Crist's July 12 press release, he links this year's Florida drought to global warming, but fails to mention the wetter-than-normal conditions that prevailed for several years before this year's drought. (heartland.org)
  • A new NASA and university analysis of ocean data collected more than 135 years ago by the crew of the HMS Challenger oceanographic expedition provides further confirmation that human activities have warmed our planet over the past century. (acm.org)
  • They've been one of the loudest voices against global warming action for years. (edf.org)
  • For many years, this deviation was denied, but it has recently been accepted by mainstream science. (spiked-online.com)
  • Working with an existing NCDC archive that holds global satellite information for the years 1983 through 2005, the researchers evened out the numbers by essentially simplifying newer satellite information to align it with older records. (science20.com)
  • Over the last five years, science has continued to make progress in exploring the connections between global warming and extreme weather. (environmentamerica.org)
  • After more than two years of fighting adamant U.S. Senate opposition to the treaty and growing scientific skepticism about the validity of the global warming theory, environmentalists are conceding that the Kyoto treaty is going nowhere, domestically or internationally. (nationalcenter.org)
  • The book is accurate and carefully researched, drawing on the author's thirty years of studying the science of global warming, and the human psyche that surrounds it. (benthamscience.com)
  • Compared with these indicators, the present warming seems to be exceptional for at least the past 1000 years. (scienceinschool.org)
  • The book begins with the earth's climate timeline, starting from the formation of the earth 4.5 billion years ago, and leading up to the Modern Warm Period. (wikipedia.org)
  • Unstoppable Global Warming: Every 1,500 Years. (wikipedia.org)
  • When the disaster these same science deniers are enabling through their opposition to anything that might limit Big Coal and Big Oil's profits finally impacts them so painfully they can no longer claim global warming is a hoax, what will be the next scientific fact they claim is a all lies? (fluther.com)
  • Global warming is one of the biggest problems facing our planet currently, and this issue will only continue to create more negative impacts in the future. (umass.edu)
  • The Arctic, for example, is warming about three times faster than the global average in part because as the planet warms, snow and ice melt makes the surface more likely to absorb, rather than reflect, the sun's radiation. (newscientist.com)
  • If global warming is going to play havoc with the weather, how do we know that the best locations for siting wind farms today will remain optimal (or even marginally productive) in the allegedly topsy turvy greenhouse planet of tomorrow? (globalwarming.org)
  • Moreover, renowned experts William Gray and Chris Landsea released two separate studies this spring showing that hurricane activity has declined in recent decades while the planet has warmed. (heartland.org)
  • A mainstay of environmentalists' arguments for climate policies is that science can explain the past and present temperature of the planet, and, using computer models, project its likely future temperature. (spiked-online.com)
  • Russian climatologist Budyko published two books in the early 1960s "warning that growing energy use will warm the planet and cause the Arctic ice pack to quickly disappear, contributing to further feedback cycles. (comoxvalleyrecord.com)
  • I mean the weather changes certainly, but at the end of the day I don't believe that there's this man-made global warming that's destroying the planet and the like,' Seifert said. (mprnews.org)
  • Global warming is and will continue to affect everyone on the planet as the effects only get more serious over time. (umass.edu)
  • Global warming, air pollution, and energy insecurity are three of the greatest problems facing humanity. (rsc.org)
  • I am willing to buy the idea about the climate getting warmer, at least around here, but I wonder about whether our knowledge is reliable even about that, and whether it is valid to extend that imprecise incomplete knowledge into a prediction about the future. (theunbrokenwindow.com)
  • The Earth is not as warm as it was expected to be. (spiked-online.com)
  • If our results hold for current warming - the magnitude of which is comparable with the long-term fluctuations in Earth climate - they suggest that extinctions will increase. (science20.com)
  • Using future projections of the latest generation of Earth system models, a U.S. National Science Foundation -supported study published in Science Advances found that most of the world's ocean is steadily losing its year-to-year memory under global warming. (nsf.gov)
  • Guided by science and economics, and committed to climate justice, we work in the places, on the projects and with the people that can make the biggest difference. (edf.org)
  • Dr Gernot Wagner, from Harvard University's School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, and co-author of the study published in Environmental Research Letters: "Given the potential benefits of halving average projected increases in radiative forcing from a particular date onward, these numbers invoke the 'incredible economics' of solar geoengineering. (express.co.uk)
  • Between 1880 and 1980, the global annual temperature increased at a rate of 0.13 degrees Fahrenheit (0.07 degrees Celsius) per decade, on average. (livescience.com)
  • Global warming is good for bad things - poison ivy, ticks, toxic algae blooms, malaria-carrying mosquitoes - but bad for good things - polar bears, ski resorts, Vermont's maple sugar industry, and the weather patterns on which agriculture (hence human survival) allegedly depend. (globalwarming.org)
  • Patterns of extreme weather are changing in the United States, and climate science predicts that further changes are in store. (environmentamerica.org)
  • Weather and climate patterns are changing, causing increasingly frequent and severe heat waves, drought, flooding, and extreme weather events, as well as a rise in sea levels, a report released in May by the U.S. Global Change Research Program concluded ( National Climate Assessment ). (cdc.gov)
  • First of all, it is wrong: the satellite data clearly show ongoing warming over the past two decades. (skepticalscience.com)
  • John Holdren is the guy whose stellar career started with global cooling in the '70s and who has managed to surf the wild waves of ecological hysteria for decades, making a damned good living at it. (americanthinker.com)
  • Like hurricanes and other extreme events that could possibly be influenced by global warming, it is impossible to connect any one wildfire to climate change. (livescience.com)
  • The April 18 issue of Geophysical Research Letters reports that global warming will increase wind shear, which will in turn prevent hurricanes from forming. (heartland.org)
  • The work should help resolve some of the controversy that has swirled around two prominent studies that drew connections last year between global warming and the onset of increasingly intense hurricanes. (science20.com)
  • The main driver of today's warming is the combustion of fossil fuels. (livescience.com)
  • A team of Skeptical Science volunteers proceeded to categorize the 12,000 abstracts - the most comprehensive survey of its kind to date. (skepticalscience.com)
  • The amount of methane that is enterically emitted by cattle increases the rate of global warming. (umass.edu)
  • The Mail on Sunday today reveals astonishing evidence that the organisation that is the world's leading source of climate data rushed to publish a landmark paper that exaggerated global warming and was timed to influence the historic Paris Agreement on climate change. (activistpost.com)
  • Finally, drawing on her extensive experience as a science journalist, she reveals the tricks self-interested players use to mislead and confuse you, and points you to sources of information you can actually rely upon. (informit.com)
  • What science will global warming deniers move on to denying when Earth's climate is very obviously ruined and causing massive disasters? (fluther.com)
  • Losing liberty over a theoretical threat is the main concern here (no one has ever been killed by manmade global warming because there is no way to distinguish manmade warming from natural). (drroyspencer.com)
  • Such is the profound nature of human-caused global warming, that it has overcome these many short-term natural cooling influences. (skepticalscience.com)
  • If we stopped all fossil fuel consumption today, and switched entirely to clean energy, we would still continue to warm throughout this century, warming enough to threaten human populations and cause mass animal and plant extinctions. (fluther.com)
  • We agreed upon definitions of possible categories: explicit or implicit endorsement of human-caused global warming, no position, and implicit or explicit rejection (or minimization of the human influence). (skepticalscience.com)
  • Powell examined nearly 14,000 abstracts, searching for explicit rejections of human-caused global warming, finding only 24. (skepticalscience.com)
  • Based on our abstract ratings, we found that just over 4,000 papers expressed a position on the cause of global warming, 97.1% of which endorsed human-caused global warming. (skepticalscience.com)
  • In the self-ratings, nearly 1,400 papers were rated as taking a position, 97.2% of which endorsed human-caused global warming. (skepticalscience.com)
  • As if the shocking economic costs were not enough of an argument against the Kyoto treaty, the mounting scientific evidence questioning the impact of human behavior on climate change has increasingly robbed global warming theorists of their veneer of scientific credibility. (nationalcenter.org)
  • It covers both the technical and human issues of global warming by addressing what's causing global warming, and why people don't believe it exists. (benthamscience.com)
  • Global climate change has become one of the most visible environmental concerns of the 21st century and these changes have the potential to affect human health both directly and indirectly. (cdc.gov)
  • The human genome or the global warming are good examples of problems which are characterized by the highest level of complexity. (bvsalud.org)
  • You've probably heard of it -- the one that says Obama should ignore global warming alarmism because the science says it isn't happening. (scienceblogs.com)
  • But the purpose of the Heartland Institute's conference is not about "real science," as most people understand it. (prwatch.org)
  • If you've been following the global warming debate for any length of time, you know how boringly predictable the "consensus" narrative has become. (globalwarming.org)
  • This very issue was brought to light Tuesday when Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid told reporters, "One reason why we have the fires in California is global warming," according to The Hill.com, a political news Web site, though Reid later said many factors contributed to the wildfires. (livescience.com)
  • Mongabay is a U.S.-based non-profit conservation and environmental science news platform. (mongabay.com)
  • Watch the news, and it's easy to be overwhelmed by snippets of badly presented science: information that's incomplete, confusing, contradictory, out-of-context, wrong, or flat-out dishonest. (informit.com)
  • In this book, Dr. Sherry Seethaler provides a "bag of tricks" for making sense of science in the news. (informit.com)
  • Trouble in Polar Paradise' section of News and Reviews, Science 297 pg 1489-1514, (30 August 2002). (worldviewofglobalwarming.org)
  • That point is prominently found in the actual content of the NAS report, which supports President Bush's responsible and cautious approach to resolve scientific uncertainties, as a condition precedent to committing the U.S. to costly global warming policies addressing that about which more is unknown than known. (cei.org)
  • On average, the Atlantic's surface is slightly colder than that but other oceans, such as the Western Pacific, are naturally much warmer. (science20.com)
  • However, the mixed layer in most oceans will become shallower in response to continued warming, resulting in a decline in ocean memory. (nsf.gov)
  • Many of the alarmists on global warming, they've got a problem because the science doesn't back them up. (skepticalscience.com)
  • It is clear that President Bush read the entire NAS report and not just selected phrases or the spin put on it by global warming alarmists," said Chris Horner, CEI Adjunct Analyst. (cei.org)
  • Wildfires that raged in Southern California this week and forced more than half a million people from their homes spread so rapidly in part because the landscape was parched by a hot, dry summer-conditions that may become more of a norm for the Southwest, thanks to global warming. (livescience.com)
  • But it turns out that whatever global warming or cooling may occur, Man is not to blame. (nationalcenter.org)
  • Between 30-50 % of northern peatlands occur in permafrost areas and global warming can radically alter their hydrology. (lu.se)
  • This has led to an overall 3.6 F (2 C) increase in global average temperature today compared with the preindustrial era. (livescience.com)
  • As soon as we stop adding aerosols, the global temperature would spike back up in a matter of months like a loaded spring, and the effect could be disastrous . (insidescience.org)
  • The higher sensitivity of existing models is made consistent with observed warming by invoking unknown additional negative forcings from aerosols and solar variability as arbitrary adjustments. (theunbrokenwindow.com)
  • Global warming" is a lot more speculative, but with satellites, weather balloons, and plenty of ocean buoys, we now know that it's just wrong. (americanthinker.com)
  • Environment Minnesota held a press conference at WeatherNation to release a new report documenting how global warming could lead to extreme weather events becoming even more common in the future. (environmentamerica.org)
  • According to Ricke's model, even though this can decrease the average global temperature, some areas near the equator and the poles may actually experience more extreme weather than before, meaning dryer places could get dryer, wetter places wetter, hotter places hotter, and colder places colder. (insidescience.org)
  • Matching data sets of marine and terrestrial diversity against temperature estimates, evidence shows that global biodiversity is relatively low during warm 'greenhouse' phases and extinctions relatively high, while the reverse is true in cooler 'icehouse' phases. (science20.com)
  • Using global satellite data, a research team has mapped the tree cover of the world's protected areas. (lu.se)
  • Those who dispute the notion of an AGW, popularly called climate sceptics, have argued that global warming is a consequence of changes in the Sun. But modern measurements of cosmic rays, sunspots and other indices used to describe the state of the Sun suggest that it has not become more active since the 1950s (see graph). (scienceinschool.org)
  • In 2020, the average global temperature over land and ocean was 1.76 F (0.98 C) warmer than the 20th-century average of 57.0 F (13.9 C). (livescience.com)