| GLOBAL
WARMING
Our Changing Climate---Now
The average global temperature has increased by 0.5 degrees Celsius
from 20 years ago. The amount of CO2 in the atmosphere has increased
by about 10 percent over the same time- see the graphs below for
the rate of increase. Sea levels have risen by about 5cm. Although
.5C and 5cm changes sound insignificant (and are small compared
to predicted future changes) they result in larger changes happening
every day all over the world. You have seen the news: glaciers are
melting in our national parks, snow caps disappearing on mountains,
large chunks breaking off glaciers and ice shelves as these bodies
break apart. Artic permafrost is thawing, and polar bears populations
are decreasing with the ice. The balance of ecosystems is changing
as animal and plant species breed and bloom earlier in the spring
and shift their geographic ranges with changing climate.

The primary source of these changes is the increasing concentration
of greenhouse gasses like CO2, methane, and fluorocarbon refrigerants
(like Freon). The gasses insulate the planet and prevent the sun’s
energy from being reradiated away from earth, resulting in a few
degrees of warming of the planet. Carbon dioxide causes 62% of radiative
warming, and refrigerant molecules, though low in number, have 20,000
times the insulating effect of CO2.
Most (80 percent) of the past 40 years warming is estimated to have
gone to warm the oceans, causing the water to expand and sea levels
to rise. Along the New York coast the sea level has risen about
2.7 cm in the last ten years, and could conservatively add another
10 cm in 20 years. Furthermore, Greenland and Antarctica are covered
with thick layers of ice which are rapidly melting in places. It
is not known how much of this ice will melt, but melting will certainly
increase the rate of sea level rise. Low lying areas like Long Island’s
south shore will be most affected as shoreline is submerged and
salt water floods estuaries and basements. The warming of the oceans
will have a further unpredictable effect on the ocean currents which
affect climate across the globe.

Rising air temperatures increase the amount of water vapor the air
can carry, and this combined with other effects such as altered
ocean currents is predicted to result in more frequent severe weather
events such as hurricanes and droughts. Our entire climate is likely
being affected by this mechanism, though no individual events can
ever be definitely linked to global warming.
The science of climate change is full of uncertainty, due to multiple
factors changing simultaneously. However, there really is no serious
scientific debate remaining about climate change: a recent survey
of published scientific papers on global climate showed that the
consensus is clear and unopposed. The world’s climate is warming,
and this is due at least in part and possibly entirely to human
activity. It’s time to start reducing our CO2 footprint worldwide.

Where
to Begin?
The Long Island Group kicks off a Cool Cities Campaign this summer
to reduce emissions one city at a time across Long Island. For details
and to get involved, see the article in this issue, and contact
our Energy
Chair.
Save money and reduce
your own CO2 footprint. Find ways of using less fuel and less
electricity: buy fluorescent lights, and replace old air conditioners
and refrigerators with energy star appliances. Look into hybrid
vehicles or using mass transit. Get a home energy audit to see if
you can reduce your heating bills. Reference the web sites included
for some ideas. It’s your money and your planet.
Visit these links for more information:
Broad
based information related to energy:
US
Department of Energy
Solar
Energy
Broadbased Online Tips
Energy
Conservation and Energy Audits
53
ways to save energy
LIPA’s
Clean Energy Initiative
Sierra Club (Loma
Prieta) site
RELI (Renewable
Energy Long Island) Solar
Green
Playbook- a Sierra Club Resource
Qualified
Incomes Use These Energy Conservation Programs
LIPA’s REAP:
New York’s Assisted Home Performance with Energy
Star:
Climate
Change
Discovery
Channel - Interactive high rated info!
EPA
(Environmental Protection Agency
EPA
Tools + Steps to Reduce Emissions
Union
of Concerned Scientists
Ross Gelbspan’s
site
What
Global Warming Will do (Word Doc)
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