It seems to me that there's not much debate on whether climate is changing. Climate is changing (and has always been changing). The same with humans' contribution to climate change. Of course people contribute to it.
But there's one question I haven't been able to find the answer to. To what extent humans are contributing to climate change? Is it 10%, 50%, 90%?
No problems commenting on an old post. And you've asked a fair question. The answer is that we don't know the *exact* percentage, we just know that the human contribution is significant, almost certainly closer to 90% (possibly more) than 50%. See:
https://climate.nasa.gov/causes/
The TL;DR is that yes, many natural phenomena are known to cause climate change. But none of them are happening at the moment. The only remaining cause of the observed temperature rise is human activity, and specifically CO2 emissions.
Sorry to comment to an old blog post.
ReplyDeleteIt seems to me that there's not much debate on whether climate is changing. Climate is changing (and has always been changing).
The same with humans' contribution to climate change. Of course people contribute to it.
But there's one question I haven't been able to find the answer to. To what extent humans are contributing to climate change? Is it 10%, 50%, 90%?
@Ash:
ReplyDeleteNo problems commenting on an old post. And you've asked a fair question. The answer is that we don't know the *exact* percentage, we just know that the human contribution is significant, almost certainly closer to 90% (possibly more) than 50%. See:
https://climate.nasa.gov/causes/
The TL;DR is that yes, many natural phenomena are known to cause climate change. But none of them are happening at the moment. The only remaining cause of the observed temperature rise is human activity, and specifically CO2 emissions.