GLOBAL WARMING
 
Global Warming is arguably the biggest environmental problem facing 
humanity in the 21st century.
The Earth is heating up- the early warning 
signs are everywhere. Human activity has been increasing the concentrations of 
greenhouse gases into the atmosphere- mostly in the form of carbon dioxide from 
the burning of fossil fuels (coal, gas, oil etc..) The Hydrocarbon economy has 
increased the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere from pre-industrial 
levels of around 280 parts per million (ppm) to current levels of roughly 370 
ppm on average worldwide.  As of 2004, the Mauna Loa Observatory in the US State of Hawaii recorded a profound increase of 376 ppm to 379 ppm in just one year. This measure is expected to double by 2050 if current rates continue. Forecasters predict a 3-7 degree farenheit increase by the end 
of the 21st century.
Since the 19th century, the mean temperature of the 
earth has increased by about 1 degree farenheit. This has resulted in a dramatic 
recession of the mountain glaciers of the world, a 40% reduction of the 
thickness of the Northern Artic Ice pack over the past 4 decades, a global sea 
level that has risen 3 times faster over the past 100 years than in the last 
3000 years, a disruption of the Earth's hydrological weather cycle, and severe 
flooding and drought conditions in certain parts of the world. Seven of the ten 
warmest years in the 20th century have occured in the 1990's. 2001 was the 
second warmest year on record.
Other effects of global warming include an 
earlier than usual spring arrival, plant and animal range shifts and population 
declines, coral reef bleaching, heavier than usual downpours, erratic snow pack 
levels, flooding, droughts and fires and the spread of insect populations and 
disease. Diseases relayed by mosquitos are among those eliciting the greatest 
concern as the world warms. Malaria and dengue fever are two of the 
mosquito-borne diseases most likely to spread dramatically as global 
tempuratures head upward.
Since 2001, 165 nations around the world have 
signed on to the 1997 Kyoto Protocols which would regulate carbon dioxide 
emissions worldwide. The United States of America practically stands alone in 
its refusal to sign onto the treaty. Since Kyoto, there have been almost yearly 
Global Warming Summits that have brought about a level of success in working to 
pull together an international consensus to set standards for reducing carbon 
emissions worldwide.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 
established by the United Nations calculates that halting the ongoing rise of 
atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases will require a 60- 70 percent 
reduction of carbon emissions.
Contrary to the US Bush Administration's 
recent move to open up the Caspian Sea/Kazakhstan oil fields- which are 
purported to be the richest and most extensive (largest) oil reserves in the 
world- the nations and peoples of the planet must learn to take command of their 
own destinies and rapidly help transit our civilization out of the hydrocarbon 
economy and move immediately towards a decentralized, non-polluting, 
alternative/free energy based economy for the 21st century.
Steve Jones
P.O. Box 1141
Boulder, Colorado
80306
USA
E-Mail: 
wahan779@yahoo.com
 
SOURCES:
1. NCAR- National Center for Atmosphertic Research
1850 Table 
Mesa Dr
Boulder, Colorado
80305
USA
Website: http://www.ncar.ucar.edu/
2. 
European Environment Agency
Kongens Nytorv 6
DK-1050
Copenhagen, 
Denmark
European Union
Website:http://www.eea.eu.int/
3. Environmental 
News Network (ENN)
2020 Milvia- #411
Berkeley, 
California
94704
USA
Website: http://www.enn.com/
4. UNEP- United 
Nations Environment Programme
United Nations Ave- Gigri
P.O. Box 
30552
Nairobi, Kenya
AFRICA
Website:http://www.unep.org/
5. NOAA- National 
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
14th and Constitution Ave- 
NW
Washington, DC
20230
USA
Website: http://www.noaa.gov/
6. Union of 
Concerned Scientists
2 Brattle Square
Cambridge, Massachussetts 
02238
USA
Website:http://www.ucsusa.org/
7. Earth Island 
Institute
300 Broadway- Suite 28
San Francisco, 
California
94133
USA
Website:http://www.earthisland.org/
8. 
World Resources Institute
10 'G' St- NE
Suite 800
Washighton, 
DC
20002
USA
Website:http://www.wri.org/
9. New 
Internationalist Magazine
55 Rectory Rd
Oxford, United Kingdom
OX4 
1BW
European Union
Website:http://www.newint.org/
10. Global 
Warming Information Center
International Headquarters
22W381, 75th 
St
Naperville, Illinois
60565
USA
Website:http://www.globalwarming.net/
11. 
Greenpeace International
Keizersgracht 176
1016 DW Amsterdam, 
Netherlands
European Union
Website:http://www.greenpeace.org/~climate
12. 
The End of Oil
Website:http://www.oocities.org/seraphim2017/oil.html
13. Movie- The Day After Tomorrow
Website: http://www.thedayaftertomorrow.com
14. ***Book- The Coming Global Superstorm
By Art Bell and Whitley Strieber
Website: http://www.angelfire.com/ms2/dreamland/books/superstorm.html
15. Anti-Gravity Propulsion
Website: http://www.oocities.org/sentinel8883
16. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute
Coop Building, MS #16
Woods Hole, Massachussetts 02543 USA
Website: http://www.whoi.edu
17. Pew Center on Global Climate Change
2101 Wilson Blvd- Suite 500
Arlington, Virginia 22201 USA
Website: http://www.pewclimate.org
18. MIT Program on Science and Policy of Global Change
MIT Building, E40-428
77 Massachussetts Ave
Cambridge, Massachussetts 02139 USA
Website: http://web.mit.edu/globalchange/www
19. Strategic Environment Initiative(SEI)/Mission to Planet Earth
Website: http://www.oocities.org/sapphire2029/sei.html
20. Prophet's Links
Website: http://www.oocities.org/blueplanet774/master.html

 
URL of this site: http://gw7.20m.com