How we define "pre-industrial" is importantIn the Paris climate treaty, nearly every world country agreed to try and limit global warming to no more than 2°C above pre-industrial temperatures, and preferably closer to 1.5°C. But a new study published in Nature Climate Change notes that the agreement didn't define when "pre-industrial" begins.Our instrumental measurements of the Earth's average surface temperature begin in the late-1800s, but the Industrial Revolution began in the mid-1700s. There's also a theory that human agriculture has been influencing the global climate for thousands of years, but the mass burning of fossil fuels kicked the human influence into high gear. Continue reading...
Study: our Paris carbon budget may be 40% smaller than thought | Dana Nuccitelli
24. červenece 2017 22:28
Příroda
Zdroj: The Guardian