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Climate science 2005: Major new discoveries
  • Authors & Acknowledgments
  • An Inconvenient Truth
  • Physical Climate (solar radiation, temperature increases, thermal inertia, ocean behavior and greenhouse gas concentrations)
    • 2005 temperature records
    • Energy imbalance
    • Risk of exceeding temperature target of 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels
    • Solar radiation and climate change
    • Human-induced climate change and oceans
    • Emissions stabilization and consequences for global mean temperature and sea level rise
    • Slowing of the Atlantic Conveyer Belt
    • Greenhouse gas levels and climate from ice core sampling
  • Hydrological Cycle (hurricanes, glacial and snow melt, and water supply)
  • Ecosystems and ecosystem services
  • Climate change mitigation technologies
Physical Climate (solar radiation, temperature increases, thermal inertia, ocean behavior and greenhouse gas concentrations)

Recent scientific studies confirm that human-induced climate change is leading to increases in atmospheric and ocean temperatures. Studies conducted in 2005 also note that there will be a delay in climate impacts as a result of thermal inertia. Therefore, even if our society were to halt greenhouse gas emissions today, we have already committed to substantial warming and sea-level rise in future years.

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