This can be seen in the latest development where the carrier is making up for a data usage reporting issue that
occurred over the recent past.
Not exact matches
Because of the strong
recent warming, the updated trend
over 1906 to 2005 is now 0.74 ± 0.18 degree C. Note that the 1956 to 2005 trend alone is 0.65 ± 0.15 degree C, emphasizing that the majority of 20th - century warming
occurred in the
past 50 years.
After
over a year of sideways and downward movement from late 2015 through early 2017, the most
recent NASA report shows that
over the
past year an acceleration in sea level rise has become visible on the NASA graph, even with just a quick glance (then again, while the long term trend is consistently upward, the annual trend is so variable, that it's likely foolish on my part to suggest a change in trend based on the most
recent periods of increase which have only been
occurring for less than 12 months).
The fact that there has on any basis been little further warming
over the course of the last 10 to 15 years
over and above that which had already
occured by the mid / late 19902 suggests that
recent extreme weather events are not the consequence of additional warming (there having been all but none these
past 15 years) and therefore must be due to natural variability of weather events in an ever changing and chaotic world in which we live.
However, the Prudent Path authors fail to reference a
recent paper (Kaufmann et al. 2009) which analyzed Arctic temperature changes
over a 2000 year period (0 to 1999 AD) and concluded that «the most
recent 10 - year interval (1999 - 2008) was the warmest of the
past 200 decades» and that «4/5 of the warmest decades
occurred during the last century».
In
recent years, many have expressed concerns that global terrestrial NPP should be falling due to the many real (and imagined) assaults on Earth's vegetation that have
occurred over the
past several decades — including wildfires, disease, pest outbreaks, and deforestation, as well as overly - hyped changes in temperature and precipitation.
Recent investigation of longer term U.S. Great Plains drought variability
over the
past 2000 years with the use of paleo - climatic data suggests that no droughts as intense as those of the 1930s have
occurred since the 1700s.