Pew Environment Group
Global Warming

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. The Basics
  3. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
  4. Policies and Proposals
  5. Legislation
  6. International Action
  7. Public Opinion
  8. Global Warming 101: Glossary of Terms

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Web Editor's Note: Sources from the original text, Global Warming: What You Need to Know in the 110th Congress, Second Session have been removed for this online presentation. Complete sources are available in the PDF version of these documents on our downloads page.

 

Global Warming: What You Need to Know

Policies and Proposals

Scientific American: Energy's Future Beyond Carbon

A Plan to Keep Carbon in Check

September 2006; Scientific American Magazine; by Robert H. Socolow and Stephen W. Pacala

Retreating glaciers, stronger hurricanes, hotter summers, thinner polar bears: the ominous harbingers of global warming are driving companies and governments to work toward an unprecedented change in the historical pattern of fossil-fuel use. Faster and faster, year after year for two centuries, human beings have been transferring carbon to the atmosphere from below the surface of the earth. Today the world's coal, oil and natural gas industries dig up and pump out about seven billion tons of carbon a year, and society burns nearly all of it, releasing carbon dioxide (CO2). Ever more people are convinced that prudence dictates a reversal of the present course of rising CO2 emissions.

The boundary separating the truly dangerous consequences of emissions from the merely unwise is probably located near (but below) a doubling of the concentration of CO2 that was in the atmosphere in the 18th century, before the Industrial Revolution began. Every increase in concentration carries new risks, but avoiding that danger zone would reduce the likelihood of triggering major, irreversible climate changes, such as the disappearance of the Greenland ice cap. Two years ago the two of us provided a simple framework to relate future CO2 emissions to this goal.

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Next: Legislation: Side by Side Comparison of Climate Change Bills in the 110th Congress


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