Both supporting and contradictory evidence exists as
to whether global warming is impacted by humans, nature, or inaccurate data. The opposing viewpoints about
the impacts of global warming are: (1) naturally occurring temperature
variation (humans have no control over it) (2) a product of human influence and
(3) a product of contaminated data. Global warming’s potential impacts are
environmentally devastating “including higher ocean levels (and)… increased
hurricane activity” (Burnett, 1997) however; can be justified as natural
occurrences. Added awareness of the global warming has developed from an
upsurge in the frequency of extreme weather events attributed to climate
change. The research showing increased
average temperature over time has been the catalyst of an ongoing debate as to
whether or not people are causing this temperature change to occur and how much
worse we can expect it to get.
The theory of “human-caused global warming is often called anthropogenic
climate change” (National Geographic News, 2007) and is one of the
opposing viewpoints on global warming. Anthropogenic
climate change is thought to be a result of increasing
deforestation coupled with the emissions produced by the burning of fossil
fuels. Because we are producing more carbon dioxide and decreasing the amount
of trees that remove carbon dioxide from the air, excess carbon dioxide
accumulates in the Earth’s atmosphere.
It is also widely believed that “methane,
which flows from landfills, livestock and oil and gas facilities, is a close second to carbon dioxide in impact on the atmosphere” (The New York Times, 2011) .
Humans largely contribute to the carbon dioxide levels on Earth and higher
carbon dioxide levels lead to higher temperatures. Humans’ being the cause of
global warming is a logical conclusion to reach after analyzing this
information.
Another one
of the opposing viewpoints on global warming is that natural occurrences cause
it. An increase in sea levels over time is
a natural occurrence. Evidence supporting this reveals a rise of “more than 300 feet over the last 18,000
years - far predating any possible human impact” (Burnett, 1997) . In any case, Earth
has hundreds of million people living within one meter of sea level and
countless heavily populated coastal cities that will reap negative effects of
rising water levels, and efforts to slow the rise are ideal. An increase in the
average global temperature would trigger the melting ice shelves in Greenland
and Antarctica so massive, the entire world would substantial increase in sea
level. Studies suggest the ice sheets in Greenland will begin to melt with a
rise in average temperature of 3 degrees Celsius. In 2005, “the number of Category 4 and
Category 5 hurricanes … almost doubled” (Lovgren, 2006) .
Many claim that it is one of the direct results of global warming. Hurricane
activity has a tendency to follow a multi-decadal cycle, which makes
determining temperatures affect on the number of hurricanes per year difficult.
Research shows overall numbers over time have remained constant and unchanged,
regardless of data that shows “tropical ocean temperatures have risen by about
0.5 degree C since 1970” (Walsh, 2008) . Experts have
strongly emphasized “that neither Hurricane Katrina nor any other single event
can be linked to global warming” (Lovgren,
2006) .
The third opposing viewpoint on global warming is
that it isn’t actually happening. The Earth’s average climate temperature has
risen “1.4 degrees Fahrenheit
(0.8 degree Celsius) around the world since 1880” (National Geographic News, 2007) according to
research done by NASA. Global satellite
data is the most reliable method of tracking this change today. “These readings
are accurate to within 0.01ÂșC, and are consistent with data from weather
balloons” (Bast, 2003) .
The technology began recording temperature data nearly 30 years ago. Before
satellites, land-based methods were relied on and were often less reliable due
to heat contamination generated by nearby urban developments. Satellites have
provided scientists with evidence that “show no warming since readings began” (Bast, 2003) in the lower
troposphere, which is an area scientists claim immediate impacts of global
warming would be reflected.
Global warming has been a topic of debate for over a decade. Some
people believe that it is a story built from inaccurate temperature reading.
Others debate whether it is cause by humans or nature. Both
supporting and contradictory evidence exists as to whether global warming is
impacted by humans, nature, or inaccurate data. The most important thing we can do is to stand united in
the effort to continue to research and record data that will give us more
insight into the cause and impacts of global warming. Is global warming a fact
or fiction? You decide. The only certainty is that the topic will continue to
be a matter of great debate for years to come.
Works Cited
Bast, J. (2003, February 1). The Heartland
Institute. Retrieved October 7, 2011, from February 2003: Eight Reasons
Why 'Global Warming' Is a Scam:
http://heartland.org/policy-documents/february-2003-eight-reasons-why-‘global-warming’-scam
Burnett, H. S. (1997, May 23). NCPA. Retrieved
October 7, 2011, from Myths of Global Warming: http://www.ncpa.org/pub/ba230
Lovgren, S. (2006, May 25). Al Gore's
"Inconvenient Truth" Movie: Fact or Hype? Retrieved October 8,
2011, from National Geographic: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/05/060524-global-warming.html
National Geographic News. (2007, June 14). National
Geographic. Retrieved October 4, 2011, from Global Warming Fast Facts:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/12/1206_041206_global_warming.html
The New York Times. (2011, September 30). The New
York Times. Retrieved October 7, 2011, from Global Warming:
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/science/topics/globalwarming/index.html
Walsh, B. (2008, September 8). TIME Science.
Retrieved October 7, 2011, from Is Global Warming Worsening Hurricanes?:
http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1839281,00.html
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