Is climate change real, and is it happening?

 

Is climate change real, and is it happening?

“Without a doubt, the change of temperatures for our climate is an abrupt change from the normal variation, therefore the expression “climate change” is not very accurate”, said Environment In Perspective.

According to the United Nations, the annual global temperature increased by approximately 0.5 °F from the year 1900 to 1990 and then changed by an additional 0.2°F during 1990 to 2000, as a result of the greenhouse gases produced by the burning of fossil fuels. Environmental scientists have confirmed this increase repeatedly over the past fifty years.

Since the 1990s, many environmental scientists have conducted experiments on greenhouse gases and on other temperatures to test the so-called “climate change” theory. Although the process of climate change is not specific to the past centuries until recently there has been no consensus on its official name. Now, a new name for climate change has been established by Georg Schmitt, a geologist and climate scientist, and Martin Popiela, a geophysicist. For Popiela and Schmitt this is called Anthropogenic Climate Change or Climate Change. Scientists argue that climate change is a new and mysterious phenomenon in general; climate change, which we often think of, is merely the offspring of the burning of fossil fuels. The term climate change has been coined because global heating is just the natural tendency to reflect the solar radiation reflected off the earth. In the year 1960, the earth’s surface was about 28 cm (1.18 inches) less than its average annual height since about two billion years ago, as a result of global warming.

Since 1990, scientists have confirmed that this shrinking effect of the earth is now decreasing, because the latter, and most of the atmosphere, are covered by a thin layer of ozone and other man-made substances, scientists agree that greenhouse gases produced by the burning of fossil fuels are responsible for the global warming. The atmosphere accounts for most of the earth’s surface heating, as it absorbs more energy than it radiates back to the earth. In this way, greenhouse gases are the key factor of the environmental changes that are now happening worldwide. Scientists estimate that it will continue in the next decade, and they go on with new researches about different ways of reducing greenhouse gases and reducing their concentration.

The scientists consider that such measures as planting plants that absorb solar radiation or recycling mountains of carbon dioxide are bound to reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by 30% to 40% within the next two decades. As for the number of greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide, methane, carbon monoxide, oxides of nitrogen, aspartate monoxide, fluorine, and trioxide of sulfur dioxide, it depends on the fact that the atmosphere can absorb about half of the sunlight that is reflected back to the Earth if it contains enough heat. Once again, increasing solar energy can effectively weaken the greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. If there is less solar radiation, it means that there is less melting of the permafrost and permafrost is so many times warmer in the northern hemisphere of the earth.

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