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How are
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1. Man-made climate change?For the first time in human history, people are changing the Earth’s climate by emitting so-called greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. The main cause is the dramatic increase in the use of fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas) since the Industrial Revolution.
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Past climate changeThe Earth’s climate has always been changing. Only 20,000 years ago, much of Northern Europe was still covered in an enormous glacier that was up to three kilometers thick! The Alps and the Pyrenees mountains were covered with smaller ice caps. Sudden climate shifts happened quite frequently during the Ice Age, and made the ice expand or contract. In the cold climate south of the ice-covered areas, small groups of people hunted reindeer, wild horses, and bison.
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We will always be at risk of unexpected and unpleasant climate changes from natural causes. For example, around 400 years ago Europe experienced a relatively cold period called the Little Ice Age (it was not as cold as a real ice age). What is different about the situation today is that we risk rapid changes in climate caused by people. Because of our increasing emissions of CO2 and other greenhouse gases, we expect that over the next hundred years we will see that fastest warming of the Earth since the end of the Ice Age.
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The Industrial Revolution took place when people began to mass produce goods in large factories using machines that ran on energy from coal, and later, oil, natural gas, and electricity. This made it much easier for people to produce goods, and helped the development of modern technology. In pre-industrial times – that is, the time before the Industrial Revolution – there were no trains, cars, planes, electric lights, factories, telephones, or televisions. The more we produce and consume, the more we affect the environment around us. During the last 50 years, for the first time in history we have seen clear signs that human influence affects the environment of the entire planet; we are creating environmental problems that are not only local but also global. One of these global environmental problems is the risk of man-made climate change, also known as global warming.
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Global climate changeMan-made climate change occurs because we emit greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. These emissions come from many sources, including the factories and agriculture that supply us with food and other material goods, power plants that provide us with electricity, and cars and planes that take us where we need to go. |
Greenhouse gases affect the Earth’s climate by increasing the greenhouse effect, which is a natural phenomenon whereby water vapor, CO2, and other gases in the atmosphere allow sunlight to pass through, but then absorb much of the heat from the earth that otherwise would have escaped to outer space. Without the natural greenhouse effect, the mean temperature would be about minus 18°C, and the Earth would be uninhabitable (choose the topic Lower atmosphere if you want to read more about the greenhouse effect). Emitting greenhouse gases in large amounts increases the concentration of these gases in the atmosphere, which then increases the greenhouse effect so that more heat is trapped by the atmosphere. This can increase the temperature of the atmosphere and change the climate on Earth. |
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