What Causes Global Warming?
Scientists
have spent decades figuring out what is causing global warming. They've
looked at the natural cycles and events that are known to influence
climate. But the amount and pattern of warming that's been measured
can't be explained by these factors alone. The only way to explain the
pattern is to include the effect of greenhouse gases (GHGs) emitted by
humans.
To bring all this information together, the United Nations formed a group of scientists called the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
or IPCC. The IPCC meets every few years to review the latest scientific
findings and write a report summarizing all that is known about global
warming. Each report represents a consensus, or agreement, among
hundreds of leading scientists.
One of the first things scientists
learned is that there are several greenhouse gases responsible for
warming, and humans emit them in a variety of ways. Most come from the
combustion of fossil fuels in cars, factories and electricity
production. The gas responsible for the most warming is carbon dioxide,
also called CO2. Other contributors include methane released from
landfills and agriculture (especially from the digestive systems of
grazing animals), nitrous oxide from fertilizers, gases used for
refrigeration and industrial processes, and the loss of forests that
would otherwise store CO2.
Different greenhouse gases have very
different heat-trapping abilities. Some of them can even trap more heat
than CO2. A molecule of methane produces more than 20 times the warming
of a molecule of CO2. Nitrous oxide is 300 times more powerful than CO2.
Other gases, such as chlorofluorocarbons (which have been banned in
much of the world because they also degrade the ozone layer), have
heat-trapping potential thousands of times greater than CO2. But because
their concentrations are much lower than CO2, none of these gases adds
as much warmth to the atmosphere as CO2 does.
In order to
understand the effects of all the gases together, scientists tend to
talk about all greenhouse gases in terms of the equivalent amount of
CO2. Since 1990, yearly emissions have gone up by about 6 billion metric
tons of "carbon dioxide equivalent" worldwide, more than a 20 percent
increase.
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