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Adapted from the Fifth National Climate Assessment
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News & Features
11-20 of 46 results
¿Cómo perjudicará el calentamiento global la salud y el bienestar de los seres humanos?
David Herring, Rebecca Lindsey |
December 16, 2020
Desde las enfermedades relacionadas con el calor, pasando por la propagación de plagas y patógenos en nuevas zonas, hasta la acumulación de toxinas en los mariscos, es probable que el calentamiento global tenga graves repercusiones en la salud pública.
¿Qué no hay mucho desacuerdo entre los científicos del clima sobre el calentamiento global?
Michon Scott |
December 16, 2020
Por una gran mayoría, los científicos del clima están de acuerdo en que la temperatura global promedio hoy en día es más cálida que en la época preindustrial, y que la actividad humana es el principal factor contribuyente.
¿Cómo dañará el calentamiento global a las comunidades, la infraestructura y la economía de los Estados Unidos?
David Herring, Rebecca Lindsey |
December 16, 2020
Desde incendios forestales más grandes e intensos hasta inundaciones repentinas más frecuentes, el calentamiento global ha aumentado el costo de los peligros naturales. El gasto actual en infraestructura no es suficiente para cubrir las reparaciones y mejoras.
¿Cómo perjudicará el calentamiento global a los recursos naturales y agrícolas de los Estados Unidos?
David Herring, Rebecca Lindsey |
December 16, 2020
El calentamiento global y el cambio climático relacionado están impactando negativamente a las especies y hábitats de todo el país, incluyendo muchas que son económica y culturalmente importantes para los estadounidenses.
¿Qué podemos hacer para frenar o detener el calentamiento global?
David Herring, Rebecca Lindsey |
December 14, 2020
Hay un gran potencial para que las acciones colectivas de muchos individuos en todo el mundo reduzcan el calentamiento global mediante la realización de cambios en actividades diarias y anuales que producen gases y aerosoles que atrapan el calor.
Are humans causing or contributing to global warming?
David Herring |
October 29, 2020
Yes, human activity is putting carbon dioxide into the atmosphere faster than natural processes take it out. Rising carbon dioxide levels are strengthening Earth's greenhouse effect and causing global warming.
What can we do to slow or stop global warming?
David Herring |
October 29, 2020
There is great potential for the collective actions of many individuals worldwide to reduce global warming by making changes in their daily and annual activities that produce heat-trapping gases and aerosols.
Are there positive benefits from global warming?
David Herring |
October 29, 2020
Yes, there will probably be some short-term and long-term positive benefits from global warming, but the negative costs and impacts of continued global warming are very likely to far outweigh the positive benefits over the course of this century.
Does "global warming" mean it's warming everywhere?
Caitlyn Kennedy |
October 29, 2020
It’s only when we “zoom out” to the planet-wide scale that trends in surface temperature are obvious: despite a few, rare areas experiencing cooling, the vast majority of places across the globe are warming.
Doesn't carbon dioxide in the atmosphere come from natural sources?
David Herring |
October 29, 2020
Yes, there are, but the only new process on Earth that has been identified that can account for the significant tipping of Earth's carbon balance is human activity, including deforestation, biomass burning, cement production, and—especially—fossil-fuel emissions.
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