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True Green Solutions
Perspectives On Environmental Issues
Perspectives on Global Warming
True Green Solutions offers a variety of differing viewpoints on environmental issues, so that you can make your own decisions and choices!
Global Warming
The Gale Group, Inc
"Global warming
is the theory that average temperatures around the world have begun to
rise, and will continue to rise, because of an increase of certain
gases in Earth's atmosphere. These gases are called ""greenhouse
gases"" because they trap heat just like a greenhouse. The most
plentiful greenhouse gases are water vapor and carbon dioxide. The
increase of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is believed to be the main
reason for global warming. What Causes Global Warming? Approximately
two-thirds of the energy earth receives from the sun is absorbed by
land masses and oceans and is then released into the atmosphere as
warm, long-wave radiation. The atmosphere of earth is full of so-called
greenhouse gases such as water vapor, carbon dioxide, ozone, methane,
and nitrous oxide that act like a blanket, trapping some of the heat
radiating from the land and oceans and preventing too much energy from
escaping into space. The gas blanket works in much the same way as the
glass panels of a greenhouse, serving to trap energy and keep
temperatures at a steady level. The trapped heat keeps earth at a
comfortable average temperature of about sixty-three degrees
Fahrenheit. This process is known as the greenhouse effect. Point 1 - Global warming
Caused by Natural Geologic Trends Human activities such as
clear-cutting rain forests, burning fossil fuels, and driving cars
contribute toward global warming. But human effects on climate are
negligible compared with the effects naturally produced by the Earth,
the atmosphere, and the Sun. The term global warming can be misleading
or even alarmist. A warming climate is a complex and erratic
phenomenon, which may include or even pass over into long or short
periods of global or regional cooling. Similarly, periods of global
cooling can include or pass over into warming periods. Until fairly
recently in geologic time, there was a long period when the Earth was
too warm to allow the formation of polar ice caps. Ocean levels
naturally fall and rise as the Earth alternately cools and warms, and
as the size of the polar ice caps consequently increases and decreases.
Probably the greatest single factor in determining global cooling and
warming cycles is the fluctuation of the Sun's energy output, over
which humans obviously have no control. Humans released twice as much
carbon dioxide into the atmosphere in 1990 as in 1958, but very little
of this carbon dioxide remained in the atmosphere to increase the
overall concentration of greenhouse gases. The main reason that
atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration has not kept pace with
industrial carbon dioxide emissions is that carbon dioxide is soluble
in water. The oceans are far from saturated with carbon dioxide. A more
troublesome way that humans increase carbon dioxide levels is by
deforestation, which increases the amount of carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere by reducing the number of trees and other green plants that
use atmospheric carbon dioxide in photosynthesis. Another
climatological factor is volcanic activity, a widespread, powerful, and
completely natural phenomenon that generally has the effect of lowering
atmospheric temperature after each eruption. There is no denying the
danger facing such places as Venice, New Orleans, the Netherlands, and
Bangladesh, which may all disappear under the sea within the next few
hundred years. That danger is quite real, but little or nothing can be
done about it, as natural causes far outstrip anthropogenic causes of
the current global warming trend. Point 2 - Global Warming Caused by
Humans According to the Third Assessment Report of the
Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released in 2001,
""There is new and stronger evidence that most of the warming observed
over the last 50 years is attributable to human activities."" Greenhouse gases
accumulating from burning fossil fuels, and other gas-producing
activities of industry, are blanketing the Earth and so causing the
warming trend. The blanket of greenhouse gases (water vapor, carbon
dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and tropospheric ozone) keeps the
planet about 59F (15C) warmer than it would be without the cover. Water
vapor is by far the most abundant greenhouse gas. The greenhouse effect
gets its name because a layer in the atmosphere acts like the glass in
a greenhouse, letting the Sun's light energy in, but preventing
reflected lower energy heat radiation from escaping. All the greenhouse
gases that occur naturally are also produced by human activities, thus
increasing their levels in the atmosphere at an accelerating pace. In
addition to the ""natural"" greenhouse gases are the fluorocarbons,
which only appeared in the atmosphere when introduced by humans. Over
the millennium before the Industrial Era, the atmospheric
concentrations of greenhouse gases remained relatively constant,
according to the IPCC report. Chlorofluorocarbons are believed by most
scientists to be responsible for depleting the ozone layer that exists
at the top of the stratosphere, the second layer in the Earth's
atmosphere. The upper stratospheric ozone layer shields the Earth from
intense ultraviolet radiation that causes skin cancer."
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