Several  top U.S.  government climate change scientists released a new report on Tuesday warning  that the effects of global warming will become more severe unless the Obama  administration takes action quickly. For years, scientists have talked about the threat of rising sea levels on  remote tropical islands and melting ice in the polar regions. But a new report  by the U.S. Global Climate Research Program makes the threat of global warming  personal.
"Climate change is happening now and it's happening in our own backyards,  and it affects the kinds of things people care about," said Jane  Lubchenco. Jane Lubchenco is the head of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric  Administration. She says the report presents scientific evidence that will  inform policy making.
The report, compiled by more than 30 scientists at 13 U.S. government agencies, describes  climate-related changes that are happening in the United States. Tom Karl, was a  principal author of the report. "U.S.  average temperature has risen by 1.5 degrees Fahrenheit over the past 50  years," said Tom Karl. "We've had more rain coming in heavy downpours  that can lead to flooding. Less winter precipitation is falling as snow, more  as rain."
The report, commissioned by the White House, uses climate models to project  what will happen if action is not taken to reduce the carbon dioxide emissions  that most scientists say cause global warming. It predicts increasingly deadly heat waves, and higher incidents of asthma and  diseases transmitted through the water and by insects and rodents. Jerry  Melillo, an author and director of the Ecosystems  Center at the Marine Biological  Laboratory in Massachusetts, says U.S. coastlines  are under particular threat of rising sea levels and stronger hurricanes.
He points specifically to the U.S.  coast along the Gulf of Mexico, where seven of the nation's 10 biggest seaports  are located and two-thirds of all U.S. oil imports are transported. "Vital  energy and transportation infrastructure will be at risk with expected sea  level rise and associated storm surge," said Jerry Melillo.
The report says the most severe affects of climate change can be avoided if  action is taken swiftly to reduce heat-trapping gasses. Not everyone is  convinced. William Gray, a professor emeritus at Colorado State  University's Department  of Atmospheric Science, is one of the skeptics. He says some scientists are  placing too much emphasis on the role of greenhouse gases in climate change.
"There's no way they can warm the way the models say they do warm,"  said William Gray. Gray says the rising temperatures are caused by natural  fluctuations in the oceans' salinity levels. "I think this whole thing in 10, 15, 20 years as we look back on this, and  as we learn more, we'll see that this was a great exaggeration," he said. Scientists  are not the only people debating climate change. The U.S. Congress is  considering legislation on how to tackle the problem. And international  negotiators from 182 nations are working on a roadmap to fight global warming.
Negotiators have to come up with a plan to replace the Kyoto Protocol on  greenhouse gas emissions by December, when they present their proposal at a  United Nations conference in Copenhagen.
Source: http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-06-17-voa20.cfm
Tags: Colorado State University, Copenhagen Conference, Atmospheric Science, Jerry Melillo, William Gray, Kyoto Protocol, Marine Biological Laboratory, Jane Lubchenco, Tom Karl, Global Development News, Global Climate Research Program,

 
 

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