I do not believe this! Two newspapers, who usually are open minded to
metrication, the Guardian and the Irish Times come up with this stuff. It
seems that scientists who studied global warming used the Fahrenheit scale!
At least, these two papers want us to believe that and once again picture a
false picture of the larger part of the world.

I am going to write to the editor.

Han


Friday, October 27, 2000

Global warming is greater than predicted - study
By John Vidal

Leading climate scientists now agree that human pollution mainly caused by
burning fossil fuels has contributed substantially to global warming in the
past 50 years and that the Earth is likely to get far hotter than previously
predicted with immense consequences for people and wildlife everywhere.

A leaked summary of the final draft of 1,000 pages of new research carried
out by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a UN-sponsored group
of hundreds of the world's leading atmosphere scientists, has been sent to
governments this week.

It is expected to add urgency to the global climate change talks in The
Hague next month where Britain intends to take an international lead in
persuading countries to set targets and timetables to reduce emissions.

The report suggests that the upper range of warming over the next 100 years
could be far higher than estimated in 1995. Its worstcase scenario now
raises the average global temperature 11F from its 1990 levels.

Average temperatures today are 9 degrees F warmer than they were at the end
of the last Ice Age. In its 1995 analysis the panel concluded that a worst
case would raise temperatures a conservative 6.3 degrees (F, probably). The
leaked document is the first major update of climate science since 1995 when
the same UN panel concluded merely that there was "a discernible human
influence" on climate because of the greenhouse effect, from build-up of
heat-trapping chemicals in the atmosphere.

The panel has now concluded that the burning of fossil fuels and emissions o
f man-made chemicals have "contributed substantially to the observed warming
over the last 50 years". The scientists believe, too, that temperatures
could go far higher and faster than previously predicted if emissions are
not curtailed. The human influence on the Earth's climate has long been
debated, but this is the first time such an authoritative group of
scientists has gone so far.

While there are still uncertainties, the scientists say there is "an
increasing body of observations that provide a collective picture of a
warming world that cannot be solely explained by natural forces. Emissions
of greenhouse gases and aerosols due to human activities continue to alter
the atmosphere in ways that affect the climate system," the report says.

Many panel members in the US say the summary represents the closest thing to
a consensus possible in science.

Global warming is expected to impact most deeply on poor countries, leading
to huge numbers of environmental refugees, crop failures and extreme
weather. The US is responsible for 23 per cent of carbon emissions, with
Britain the same as the whole of Africa at 3 per cent. - (Guardian Service)

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