Effects of climate change on earth's mean temperature.
The Earth is Warming
The world is undoubtedly warming. The Earth’s average surface temperature has increased by about 1.8°F (1.0°C) since the late 1800s. The 10 warmest years on record (since 1880) have all occurred since 1998, and all but one happened since 2005.
Scientists have high confidence that global temperatures will continue to rise for decades to come, largely due to greenhouse gases produced by human activities. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which includes more than 300 scientists from the United States and other countries, forecasts a temperature rise of 2.5 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit over the next century.
The Greenhouse Effect
Light from the sun passes through the atmosphere and is absorbed by the Earth’s surface, heating it up. That energy is then emitted back to the atmosphere. Greenhouse gases, like carbon dioxide and methane, in the atmosphere act like a blanket, absorbing this energy and preventing it from escaping into space. In the absence of a greenhouse effect, the average temperature at the Earth’s surface would be approximately 0 degrees F, about 60 degrees F colder than Earth’s current average temperature. Thus, the greenhouse effect is very important to the survival of life on Earth. But the growing concentration of greenhouse gases from human activities is making this blanket thicker, and warming the planet, which has impacts on ecosystems and our way of life.

The warming of the Earth is largely the result of emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases from human activities. These activities include burning fossil fuels, such as coal and oil, and changes in land use, such as agriculture and deforestation. Carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere have increased since pre-industrial times from 280 parts per million to over 400 parts per million.
The reason for the accumulation is simple: Human activities are emitting more carbon dioxide than the planet’s natural processes (uptake by plants and the ocean) can remove. It’s like a bathtub where the flow of water out of the faucet is more than the flow through the drain, causing the water level in the bath to rise.
Other factors capable of changing the climate, like volcanic eruptions and changes in the sun’s intensity, cannot by themselves explain the changes we’ve recently observed in the Earth’s climate. The figure below shows the outcomes of different computer simulations of climate (see caption for details). Only the simulations that included human influences exhibited warming similar to the observed temperatures.
Taken as a whole, the range of published evidence indicates that the net damage costs of climate change are likely to be significant and to increase over time.



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