Sentences with phrase «global nature means»

Football's increasingly global nature means Manchester United will approach the FA Youth Cup final with Sheffield United pledging to continue their worldwide search for talent.

Not exact matches

But the consciousness of the global nature of poverty and exploitation in the world today, the knowledge of the interdependence between nations and the understanding of the international missionary responsibility of the Church - all invite, in fact oblige, every church and every Christian to think of ways and means to share the Good News with the poor of today.
This means that the fundamental constituents of nature must have built into them a quality... The name I shall give to this hypothesized quality of receptivity to meaning is «mentality»... Unless the universe is pervasively «mental» there would be no possibility of any global meaning taking up residence within it.
The deal means the company is now bringing tommee tippee and closer to nature ® (back) together - united under its new modern global masterbrand.
The global nature of CAR T research means that scientists and policymakers need to collaborate to ensure everyone has access to safe and effective treatments.
The iron deprivation means that estimates of global ocean carbon uptake are probably 2 to 4 percent too high, the group reports in the August 31 Nature.
«Our findings mean that nature is not as efficient in slowing global warming as we previously thought,» said Kees Jan van Groenigen, research fellow at the Center for Ecosystem Science and Society at NAU and lead author of the study.
Further, as a sheer practical matter, the distributed global nature of the internet means no group can be kept offline entirely.
All of global nature has become dependent on a circuit of capital premised on accumulation by financial means rather than on industrial or agricultural production.
I love cc's its easy and global in nature, but I have ALWAYS paid all my cc debt unfailingly on time and 100 % balance and never paid interest... i have also gained quite some $ $ back from them... which has been a big bonus for me and fmly... i wish more americans would show some restraint in spending beyond means...
Furthermore, the global nature of these games means that it doesn't matter where the cheating is taking place, as it has the potential to negatively impact other gamers around the world, and this sets a big challenge for game publishers.
The increasing global nature of the art world means there were fewer British entries generally on the Power 100 and there is not a single Young British Artist this year — neither Damien Hirst nor Tracey Emin make the list, although Jay Jopling, who owns the gallery White Cube and represents both artists, is present at number 32.
Michael Oppenheimer has sent a rebuttal to Nature making similar arguments in defense of global mean temperature.
But the skewed nature of the distribution of possible sensitivities means that it is much more likely that 450 ppm will give us more than 4.5 °C of global warming rather than less than 2 °.
Yu Kosaka & Shang - Ping Xie, as published in Nature (http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v501/n7467/full/nature12534.html): «Despite the continued increase in atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations, the annual - mean global temperature has not risen in the twenty - first century1, challenging the prevailing view that anthropogenic forcing causes climate warming.»
The main changes in radiative forcing from the precessional cycle are in the latitudinal and seasonal distribution, not in the global mean, which is why the nature of the response can be expected to be different from doubling CO2.
And without going into all remarks made by Lindzen: when he concludes that global mean temperature anomaly ceased increasing by the mid nineties he appears to be in good company (Phil Jones in the BBC interview, Susan Solomon in her Nature article earlier this year).
I mean: challenges that are of a global and a local nature at exactly the same time.
Studies surveyed Millar, R. et al. (2017) Emission budgets and pathways consistent with limiting warming to 1.5 C, Nature Geophysics, doi: 10.1038 / ngeo3031 Matthews, H.D., et al. (2017) Estimating Carbon Budgets for Ambitious Climate Targets, Current Climate Change Reports, doi: 10.1007 / s40641 -017-0055-0 Goodwin, P., et al. (2018) Pathways to 1.5 C and 2C warming based on observational and geological constraints, Nature Geophysics, doi: 10.1038 / s41561 -017-0054-8 Schurer, A.P., et al. (2018) Interpretations of the Paris climate target, Nature Geophysics, doi: 10.1038 / s41561 -018-0086-8 Tokarska, K., and Gillett, N. (2018) Cumulative carbon emissions budgets consistent with 1.5 C global warming, Nature Climate Change, doi: 10.1038 / s41558 -018-0118-9 Millar, R., and Friedlingstein, P. (2018) The utility of the historical record for assessing the transient climate response to cumulative emissions, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, doi: 10.1098 / rsta.2016.0449 Lowe, J.A., and Bernie, D. (2018) The impact of Earth system feedbacks on carbon budgets and climate response, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, doi: 10.1098 / rsta.2017.0263 Rogelj, J., et al. (2018) Scenarios towards limiting global mean temperature increase below 1.5 C, Nature Climate Change, doi: 10.1038 / s41558 -018-0091-3 Kriegler, E., et al. (2018) Pathways limiting warming to 1.5 °C: A tale of turning around in no time, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, doi: 10.1098 / rsta.2016.0457
This would mean that the 0.3 °C global average temperature rise which has been predicted for the next decade by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change may not happen, according to the paper published in the scientific journal Nature
Then, the idea of Ecological Footprints emerges, co-developed first by Mathis Wackernagel, CEO and co-founder of Global Footprint Network, in order to reveal what individuals, businesses, cities, and countries demand from nature and highlight the role of governments in managing our natural capital more wisely to ensure all live well, within the means of our planet.
The inherently global nature of many SRM technologies means that questions about how to effectively govern them have been intrinsic to the debate from its outset.
As shown in the WRE paper (Nature v. 379, pp. 240 - 243), the differentials at the global - mean level are so small, at most a few tenths of a degree Celsius and a few cm in sea level rise and declining to minuscule amounts as the pathways approach the SAME target, that it is unlikely that an analysis of future climate data could even distinguish between the pathways.
But, of course, we can also get back to the dubious nature of defining the «global mean» to determine what is the «hottest ever» in the first place.
While the IPCC reports of 2007 were praised for their recognition of the causes of global warming, the slow, consensus - based nature of the process, meant more recent data was not included.
First off, about a year after the IPCC released its AR4 report (from which the EPA took its statement), David Thompson and colleagues published a paper in Nature magazine titled «A large discontinuity in the mid-twentieth century in observed global - mean surface temperature.»
After all, even the EPA's own lawyers, non-scientist professional bureaucratic infighters that they are, seem to recognize that if Mother Nature could, in pre-industrial times, raise the earth's global mean temperature to levels approaching today's levels — but without the benefit of having that additional 100 ppm of atmospheric CO2 with which to force the increase — then key parts of current AGW theory can be called into question, even the climate prediction models.
Removing this internal signature from the observed global mean temperature record should clean up the individual and unique realization of nature, isolating the forced climate signal.
In April 2012, DJ Rowlands, from Oxford, published an article in Nature Geoscience that concluded, in part: «We find that model versions that reproduce observed surface temperature changes over the past 50 years show global - mean temperature increases of 1.4 - 3 K by 2050, relative to 1961 - 1990, under a mid-range forcing scenario».
No attempt was made to automatically detect and correct inhomogeneities, assuming that because of their random nature they would have little effect on the global mean.
The quasi-periodic nature of the model's AMO suggests that in the absence of external forcings at least, there is some predictability of the THC, AMO and global and Northern Hemisphere mean temperatures for several decades into the future.
The (formerly respected) scientific journal Nature chimed in and announced in an (Oct. 26) editorial [i] that any results confirming «climate change» (meaning anthropogenic global warming — AGW) are welcome, even when released before peer review.
Rogelj, J. et al. (2018) Scenarios towards limiting global mean temperature increase below 1.5 C, Nature Climate Change, doi: 10.1038 / s41558 -018-0091-3
In theory, the GDPR only applies to EU citizens» data, but the global nature of the internet means that nearly every online service is affected, and the regulation has already resulted in significant changes for US users as companies scramble to adapt.
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