Humans
Responsible for Global Warming: Study

From
years, it has been said that the main reason for global warming are humans. Now
a new statistical analysis substantiates evidence that human activities are causing
the world temperatures to rise. The study was done by physicist Pablo F. Verdes
of the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences in Germany.
Usually
climate change scientists reproduce Earth systems from the ground up, trying to
account for all climate driving forces. But small changes in these models can
lead to a broad range of outcomes. This invited debate to the actual causes of
climate change. But Verdes managed to steer clear of the skewed flaws of climate
models by applying sophisticated analysis techniques to data from the past hundred
and fifty years. This mathematical approach brings together known facts about
the global climate into a more objective and logical picture.
He basically examined data
on temperature anomalies, the strength of the radiation emitted from the Sun and
volcanic activity. Reduced volcanic activity along with relatively recent increases
in solar radiation adds to the increase in world temperatures. Nevertheless, the
physicists analysis reveals that these natural causes do not completely
explain the observed warming. He calculated the amount of non-natural influence
necessary to match the raise in temperature observed in the last 150 years and
plotted this influence over time, later comparing it to the evolution of greenhouse
gasses, taking into account the cooling due to aerosols.
Pablo
F. Verdes was astonished! It reinforced that influences attributable to greenhouse
gasses reflect the graph of non-natural influence needed to clarify the observed
temperature increase of recent decades.
Imagine
the issue of global warming as a jigsaw puzzle. Natural factors such as increased
solar radiation and reduced volcanic activity made some parts of this puzzle,
but then there were some holes remaining. So if you want to complete this jigsaw
puzzle, you know which ones will fill it. Yes, you are right; the human factors
of greenhouse gas and aerosol emission finish the whole puzzle.