
Understanding the Impacts of Climate Change
Over the past century,
the Earth’s average
temperature has increased
by approximately 1°F,
with 10 of the warmest
years on record occurring
since 1990. There have
been numerous worldwide
scientific studies
exploring possible contributory
factors to this
warming trend. The most
recent Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change
Third Assessment Report
(2001) concluded “new
and stronger evidence
that most of the warming
observed over the last 50
years is attributable to human
activities.”
There is a belief that
increasing concentrations
of greenhouse gases in the
atmosphere are accelerating
the rate of global climate
change. Many chemical compounds
found in the Earth’s atmosphere
act as greenhouse gases.
Levels of several important greenhouse
gases have increased by about 25 percent since
large-scale industrialization began around 150 years ago;
atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide in particular are higher
today than they have been for more than 400,000 years.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is believed to be the largest contributor
to the overall increase in greenhouse gases. Relatedly,
scientific studies have shown that an increased amount of CO2
by human activities has occurred over the last few hundred
years. These specific human activities include burning fossil-
fuels such as gasoline, coal, and natural gas, all of which
contribute to the buildup of CO2 in the atmosphere. Fossil
fuels alone are responsible for approximately 98 percent of U.S. CO2
emissions.
What does all of
this mean in terms of
specific impacts to the
environment? A May
2001 National Research
Council study stated,
“Greenhouse gases are
accumulating in Earth’s
atmosphere as a result of
human activities, causing
surface air temperatures
and sub-surface
ocean temperatures
to rise. Temperatures
are, in fact, rising. The
changes observed over
the last several decades
are likely mostly due to
human activities, but
we cannot rule out that
some significant part
of these changes is also
a reflection of natural
variability.” Some believe
that the environmental
damage will have such
severe impact that immediate
steps should be taken to reduce
CO2 emissions, regardless of the
economic costs to advanced nations
such as the United States. Yet others refer to
the global temperature observations from over thousands
of years which indicate that global temperatures fluctuated
greatly in the past, long before the introduction of human
industrial activity.
While potential future environmental impacts of climate
change have yet to be defined in absolute terms, Battelle is
positioned to help government policy makers and companies
act in the face of this uncertainty. This issue of Environmental
Updates highlights Battelle’s role in various climate change
activities, including greenhouse gas emissions management,
carbon sequestration, and technology strategy evaluations.
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