This way, catastrophic floods and devastating droughts which occur at the same time and in the same place can be said to be human - caused, and each single event can necessarily be claimed to have been
driven by anthropogenic climate change.
Not exact matches
The model results (which are based on
driving various
climate models with estimated solar, volcanic, and
anthropogenic radiative forcing
changes over this timeframe) are,
by in large, remarkably consistent with the reconstructions, taking into account the statistical uncertainties.
«Based on these studies, and many others using fossil and historical records, we argue that evidence for the widely cited view that future
climate change poses an equal or greater threat to global biodiversity than
anthropogenic land - use
change and habitat loss (Thomas et al., 2004) is equivocal: extinctions
driven by the latter processes of habitat loss pose a far greater threat to global biodiversity.
Current attempts
by national governments worldwide to control industrial CO2 emissions following the recommendations of the IPCC could be viewed within the scientific paradigm as the projection of a large scale experiment on the earth's
climate system to validate the hypothesis that
anthropogenic CO2 emissions through the burning of fossil fuels and land use
changes (inter alia) are a major factor
driving climate change.
The Nov. 2 - 4 Vatican workshop titled «Health of People, Health of Planet and our Responsibility:
Climate Change, Air Pollution and Health» will attempt to link up the health risks posed by air pollution with anthropogenic climate change driven by carbon emi
Climate Change, Air Pollution and Health» will attempt to link up the health risks posed by air pollution with anthropogenic climate change driven by carbon emis
Change, Air Pollution and Health» will attempt to link up the health risks posed
by air pollution with
anthropogenic climate change driven by carbon emi
climate change driven by carbon emis
change driven by carbon emissions.
global warming,
climate change, fossil fuel emissions, detrended correlation analysis, detrended fluctuation analysis, AGW,
anthropogenic global warming, warming
driven by emissions, SST, tropical cyclone, hurricane
As an outsider, that tells me that the TOE is not strongly influenced
by CO2 and that regardless of what is actually
driving climate change, it doesn't really matter as long as the
changes are so minor that experts can not even agree as to the SLOPE of the TOE data, never mind what portion of the
change in the TOE, if any, is
anthropogenic.
We'd
driving the models with the GHG concentrations, and using carbon cycle models within the
climate models to simulate the natural carbon fluxes (atmosphere - land and atmosphere - ocean), which themselves are affected
by the simulated
climate change, and the residual needed to balance the carbon budget then indicates the
anthropogenic emissions that would give the prescribed scenario of CO2 rise.
The loud divergence between sea - level reality and
climate change theory — the
climate models predict an accelerated sea - level rise
driven by the
anthropogenic CO2 emission — has been also evidenced in other works such as Boretti (2012a, b), Boretti and Watson (2012), Douglas (1992), Douglas and Peltier (2002), Fasullo et al. (2016), Jevrejeva et al. (2006), Holgate (2007), Houston and Dean (2011), Mörner 2010a, b, 2016), Mörner and Parker (2013), Scafetta (2014), Wenzel and Schröter (2010) and Wunsch et al. (2007) reporting on the recent lack of any detectable acceleration in the rate of sea - level rise.
I encourage readers to see Haynie's «Future of
Climate Change»: He provides numerous graphs showing CO2
driven by natural causes, not
anthropogenic.
Increasing emissions and concentrations of carbon dioxide receive considerable attention, but our analyses identify an important
change in another pathway for
anthropogenic climate change — a rapid rise in
anthropogenic sulfur emissions
driven by large increases in coal consumption in Asia in general, and China in particular.
First, and most politically, we need to recognise that
anthropogenic climate change is
driven primarily
by the economic logic of global fossil fuel extraction, and only to a lesser extent
by the social practices and infrastructure that shape national emissions.