Global warming, explained

20 Cards

EDITED BY Brad Plumer

2014-10-22 12:13:16 -0400

  1. What is global warming?
  2. How do we know global warming is real?
  3. How do we know humans are causing global warming?
  4. Where do greenhouse gas emissions come from?
  5. How has global warming affected the world so far?
  6. How high will global temperatures rise?
  7. What impacts will global warming have in the future?
  8. What is sea-level rise?
  9. What is ocean acidification?
  10. Is it "dangerous" to have more than 2°C of global warming?
  11. What happens if the world heats up more drastically — say, 4°C?
  12. How do we stop global warming?
  13. Can't we just adapt to global warming?
  14. What are the UN climate talks?
  15. What is geoengineering?
  16. Did climate change cause today’s awful weather?
  17. What is climate skepticism?
  18. It’s cold outside! Does that disprove global warming?
  19. Has global warming slowed down recently?
  20. What else should I be reading about global warming?
  1. Card 1 of 20

    What is global warming?

  2. Card 2 of 20

    How do we know global warming is real?

  3. Card 3 of 20

    How do we know humans are causing global warming?

  4. Card 4 of 20

    Where do greenhouse gas emissions come from?

  5. Card 5 of 20

    How has global warming affected the world so far?

  6. Card 6 of 20

    How high will global temperatures rise?

  7. Card 7 of 20

    What impacts will global warming have in the future?

  8. Card 8 of 20

    What is sea-level rise?

  9. Card 9 of 20

    What is ocean acidification?

  10. Card 10 of 20

    Is it "dangerous" to have more than 2°C of global warming?

  11. Card 11 of 20

    What happens if the world heats up more drastically — say, 4°C?

  12. Card 12 of 20

    How do we stop global warming?

  13. Card 13 of 20

    Can't we just adapt to global warming?

  14. Card 14 of 20

    What are the UN climate talks?

  15. Card 15 of 20

    What is geoengineering?

  16. Card 16 of 20

    Did climate change cause today’s awful weather?

    Whenever there's a heat wave or drought or hurricane, people often ask whether global warming is "to blame" for the bad weather.

    It's a tricky question. Storms and heat waves and droughts happen all the time. Global warming is expected to make certain weather events — like heat waves — more frequent. But it can be difficult to tie an individual weather event to warming.

    One oft-used analogy is to baseball players and steroids. Baseball players can hit home runs without steroids. But they can hit more home runs, on average, after taking steroids. So it's safe to say that steroid use will lead to more home runs. But it's harder to prove that a specific home run was caused by steroids. (Would he have hit this home run if he never took steroids? Who knows?)

    That said, climate scientists have been finding ways to link some extreme weather events to global warming. One study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, for instance, found that a deadly 2010 heat wave in Moscow would have been very, very unlikely to occur in the absence of global warming. Studies like this are still fairly rare and often disputed, but they do exist.

    Alternatively, you could say that global warming can make certain weather events worse. For example: it's very hard to say whether an individual hurricane was "caused" by global warming. But sea-level rise can exacerbate the storm surges and flooding from the floods that do happen.

  17. Card 17 of 20

    What is climate skepticism?

  18. Card 18 of 20

    It’s cold outside! Does that disprove global warming?

  19. Card 19 of 20

    Has global warming slowed down recently?

  20. Card 20 of 20

    What else should I be reading about global warming?