Risks of
irreversible changes increase with warming
Not exact matches
«If left unchecked,» the United Nations warned this month, «climate
change will
increase the likelihood of severe, pervasive and
irreversible impacts for people and ecosystems.»
If left unchecked, climate
change will
increase the likelihood of severe, pervasive and
irreversible impacts for people and ecosystems.
A new report from the IPCC says that climate
change — if left unchecked — will
increase the likelihood of severe, pervasive and
irreversible impacts for people and ecosystems.
These
changes, the report notes, will place
increasing stress on water, health, energy and transportation systems and have, in several instances, already crossed tipping points to
irreversible change.
«We found that several vulnerable elements in Earth's climate system — like the Amazon and other big rain forests, like the great ice sheets that have so much sea level locked up in their ice — could be pushed toward abrupt or
irreversible change if we go on toward 2100 with our business - as - usual
increase in emissions of greenhouse gases,» he said.
While forecasting the state of the environment more than 80 years into the future is a notoriously inexact exercise, academics gathered by the the United Nations at the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change are concerned the world is headed for «extensive» species extinctions, serious crop damage and
irreversible increases in sea levels even before Trump started to unpick the fight against global warming.
First, there is broad agreement that if we keep global temperature
increases below 2 degrees Celsius, it is «likely» that we'll avoid
irreversible, runaway climate
change.
The spewing of 110 million tonnes a day of heat - trapping pollution into the atmosphere — as if the atmosphere were an open sewer — is «
increasing the likelihood,» says a warning from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, «of severe, pervasive and
irreversible impacts for people and ecosystems».
Such an
increase in CO2 emissions could raise global average temperatures by 6 °C or more, resulting in significant impacts on all aspects of life and
irreversible changes in the natural environment.
Were the
increase in average global temperatures held below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), then drastic climate
change and long - term
irreversible damage — like the melting of Greenland's glaciers — could still be avoided.
This movement of heat is
irreversible —
changes of state in the gas that
increase the entropy of the Universe are
irreversible changes by consistent definition, something you can easily enough understand if you really try.
A 127 - page final draft of the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change report sent to governments Monday warned the effects of global warming already are felt across all the continents and oceans and further emissions will
increase the likelihood of «severe, pervasive and
irreversible impacts for people and ecosystems.»
A 550 world dramatically
increases the likelihood of catastrophes and runaway climate
change, such as an
irreversible melting of the Greenland ice sheet resulting in sea - level rise of 7 metres.
The
increasing use of this pejorative term — and its bedfellow qualifiers «chaotic», «
irreversible», «rapid» — has altered the public discourse around climate
change.
The 2008 paper,
Irreversible climate change due to carbon dioxide emissions, by Solomon et al., says that the climate change that takes place due to increases in carbon dioxide concentration is largely irreversible for 1,000 years after emissions stop, due to the thermal inertia of
Irreversible climate
change due to carbon dioxide emissions, by Solomon et al., says that the climate
change that takes place due to
increases in carbon dioxide concentration is largely
irreversible for 1,000 years after emissions stop, due to the thermal inertia of
irreversible for 1,000 years after emissions stop, due to the thermal inertia of the oceans.
The yearlong project of hundreds of scientists to assess the current state of climate
change concluded that its impacts are already being felt «on all continents and across the oceans,» and that we're
increasing our chances of experiencing «severe, pervasive and
irreversible» consequences the more we continue to emit greenhouse gases.
It recommended that risk assessment needs to include analyses of how hazards are
changing, human activities that drive environmental
changes, the creation of new hazards,
irreversible changes and the
increasing probability of hazard occurrence.
This paper shows that the climate
change that takes place due to
increases in carbon dioxide concentration is largely
irreversible for 1,000 years after emissions stop.
while the public is becoming aware that climate
change is
increasing the likelihood of certain local disasters, many people do not yet understand that there is a small, but real chance of abrupt, unpredictable and potentially
irreversible changes with highly damaging impacts on people in the United States and around the world.