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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Do cows contribute more to atmospheric warming than cars?

In this article and many others, I read that cows are contributing to the climate change more than cars in releasing CO2. A United Nations report has identified the world's rapidly growing herds of cattle as the greatest threat to the climate,…
Grasper
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Did the IPCC obfuscate the evidence in a way that obscures the discrepancy between previous climate models and recent observations?

Just before the recent IPPC meeting which was due to publish new analysis on climate change, the Financial Times published an excellent summary of the difference between predictions made in the last IPCC report and actual observations. The chart…
matt_black
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Are glaciers melting?

There seems to be a scientific consensus that glaciers are melting. For instance: Buzzle (Non-peer reviewed web-article): The last century has been a problem for glaciers across the globe. They are melting, but at an alarming rate. Fresh snow that…
JSideris
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Is global warming impossible because of CO₂'s dilution?

Gary Novak argues (e.g. in his book, Science Errors and on his web site) that climate models are incorrect, because of a missing "dilution" factor. Climatologists skipped over the dilution factor. Each CO2 molecule in the air would have to be…
James
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Is half of the climate change in the past 110 years due to natural variation in the Sun's output?

A NASA website says: Of the many trends that appear to cause fluctuations in the Sun’s energy, those that last decades to centuries are the most likely to have a measurable impact on the Earth’s climate in the foreseeable future. Many researchers…
DavePhD
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Are there alternative methods of meat production (such as free-range meat) that are better for the environment than factory farmed meat?

Possible Duplicate: Organic food is worse for the environment because it requires more land than non-organic food Most meat in developed nations is produced by Industrial agriculture methods, such as factory farming. Free-range meat is an example…
Sam I Am
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Did increased global methane emissions in 2017 come from cattle farming?

In a 2017 press release, Don’t blame cattle – it’s humans who caused methane levels to skyrocket., Robert Howarth, Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Cornell University claims that there was a recent surge in global methane emissions,…
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Publication Bias in Climate Sensitivity Estimates

It is claimed by Rickova and Irsova, in a paper titled "Publication Bias in Measuring Climate Sensitivity" [A], that: We present a meta-regression analysis of the relation between the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and changes in…
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Did British homes increase greenhouse gas emissions by 4% in 2018?

According to this report from The Times, Greenhouse gas emissions fell in every sector — including transport, industry and energy — in 2018, but emissions from homes went up 4 per cent, government data shows. Is it true that emissions from homes…
Chris Rogers
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Is climate change already killing people and costing billions in the USA?

According to Gizmodo: Climate change will make our lives worse in the years to come, but a new report out last week highlights the stark costs people are already paying across the Atlantic. In 2012 alone, it found that in the US, 10 major…
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To what extent do needle trees contribute to fine dust pollution?

Today I ran into an article concerning cars and their effect on the existence of particulate matter. Especially the last paragraph caught my attention where it is claimed that coniferous also contribute highly to the formation of particulate matter.…
NashVio
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Have climate models in the 80's and 90's accurately predicted today's climate?

Climate models seem to pretty useful tools for predicting future climate. Considering constant refinement of the models and Moore's law, it is conceivable that today's climate models are far more accurate than the ones developed a decade or two ago.…
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Is this refutation of Climate Change scientifically valid?

From this article. I don't like Breitbart as a source but I try hard to make sure I don't dismiss entirely their claims without reason. I'd like help interpreting their claims. A German professor has confirmed what skeptics from Britain to the US…
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Does temperature drive CO₂?

The blog THE HOCKEY SCHTICK claims that "temperature drives CO2 levels, not man-made CO2". The paper "Atmospheric verification of anthropogenic CO2 emission trends" is cited as proof. The claim is detailed as follows: A recent paper published in…
user20862
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Are the latest estimates of the cost of climate policy five time higher than the projected benefits?

Bjorn Lomborg argues that the implication of the latest IPCC report is that current mitigation policies are not smart in that the cost of mitigating CO2 emissions is much higher than the benefits: Climate change has been portrayed as a huge…
matt_black
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