Questions tagged [climate-change]

Climate change is a significant and lasting change in the statistical distribution of weather patterns. In public discourse, often used as a shorthand for the effects of anthropogenic global warming.

Climate change is a significant and lasting change in the statistical distribution of weather patterns over periods ranging from decades to millions of years. Climate change may be limited to a specific region or may occur across the whole Earth.

The term sometimes is used to refer specifically to climate change caused by human activity, as opposed to changes in climate that may have resulted as part of Earth's natural processes. In this latter sense, used especially in the context of environmental policy, the term climate change today is synonymous with anthropogenic global warming. Within scientific journals, however, global warming refers to surface temperature increases, while climate change includes global warming and everything else that increasing greenhouse gas amounts will affect.

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Are polar bears doing well despite a reduction in sea ice?

From Skeptical Science and many other sources: In conclusion, the reason polar bears have been classed as threatened comes from the impacts of future climate change on the bears’ habitat. Current analysis of subpopulations where data is sufficient…
gerrit
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Can some simple, old models of the effect of CO₂ predict temperature better than complex modern climate simulations?

A recent post on the climate skeptic blog climateaudit.org showed some comparisons of the relationship between world temperature and CO2 over the 20th century from a simple model originally published in the 1930s and a recent complex model from the…
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Do candles emit ten times the carbon dioxide of an equivalent lightbulb?

In Wasteful Earth Hour?, it's claimed that candles emit roughly 10 times the carbon dioxide of light bulbs of the same brightness. While emissions will vary depending on the candle, the lightbulb and the electricity source, is this claim more or…
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Has non-TSI solar output increased over the past century in ways the IPCC climate models ignore?

Prof. Nir Shaviv, an American-Israeli astrophysicist, who argues against Anthropomorphic Global Warming, wrote (6 years ago): As an astrophysicist, I see that the scope of solar effects considered by the IPCC is very limited; thus it arrives at…
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Is Bhutan the only carbon neutral/negative country?

Twitter moments recently had a moment about Bhutan being the only carbon neutral country in the world: Why Bhutan Is All Alone in the Carbon-Neutral Nation Club and one tweet in the Twitter moments said Here's why Bhutan is the only carbon-neutral…
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Were Alpine glaciers much smaller in Roman times?

In a critique (or possibly a rant) against modern climate science, Swiss geologist Christian Schlüchter makes a very specific claim that Alpine glaciers were essentially non-existent (or very much smaller than they are today) in Roman times. From a…
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Is the cost of preventing climate change 50 times higher than the cost of adapting to it?

Political activist Topher has created the "50-to-1" project. In the explanatory video, he claims that: It's 50 times more expensive to try to stop climate change than it is to adapt to climate change as and if it happens. The reasoning and…
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Are rising temperatures making fires worse?

Al Gore tweeted: Ferocious wildfire in California forces evacuation of ~3,000 [...] Rising temperatures are making fires worse. (Emphasis mine) Is this true?
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Are the leaked Heartland Institute documents legitimate?

Dr. Phil Plait just posted this regarding the leak of some documents from a group called the Heartland Institute. There is some skepticism as to the authenticity of these documents. Are these legitimate documents produced by the Heartland…
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Do the recent CLOUD results have significant implications for global warming?

According to this Science Daily summary of a recent paper published in Nature and the abstract at Nature, a recent result indicates that cosmic rays play a larger role in cloud formation than was previously credited. This has been claimed to…
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Is Amazon powered by 85% renewable energy?

In a video on the TED YouTube channel, Chris Roe, Amazon's director of energy and sustainable operations, makes a claim that Amazon is powered by 85% renewable energy. I suspect 85% is too optimistic a number. When we started our journey, we were…
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Is the equivalent of 2000 American football fields lost every hour due to drought and desertification?

BBC states the following Approximately 12 million hectares (46,000 sq miles) are lost around the world each year as a direct consequence of drought and desertification. That's the equivalent of 2,000 American football fields every hour. To put that…
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Does climate change mean that weather becomes more variable in addition to being warmer?

In public media the notion that climate change is more than global warming gets repeated frequently. Are there strong predictions that show that the climate becomes more irregular? Would we expect the weather in any particular place to suffer…
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Are we heading for a mini ice age?

According to the following article: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/06/14/ice_age/ Sunspot activity is rapidly declining, and when this has happened in the past this has led to a mini ice age. I'm pretty sceptical about it myself, but is there…
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Is there more forest in the Northern Hemisphere now than 100 years ago?

In April 19, 2019, there was a public debating event called "Happiness: Capitalism vs. Marxism" featuring Canadian psychologist Jordan B. Peterson and psychoanalytical philosopher Slavoj Žižek as the two speakers. During this so-called "debate of…
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