| Alexander E. Farrell, Jill Jäger - 2006 - 317 pages
...launched a massive assault against the final version of Chapter 8 of Working Group I,-which concluded that "the balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate" (Houghton et al. 1996, 4). The accusations published in -widely read newspapers like the Wall Street... | |
| G. C. Boere, Colin A. Galbraith, David A. Stroud - 2006 - 836 pages
...could have offset a still larger hitman-induced greenhouse wanning"; 2 Second Assessment Report 1995: "The balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate"'. and 3 Third Assessment Report 2(KK): "Most of the observed warming in the past 50 years is attributable... | |
| Katy Human - 2006 - 192 pages
...Human Impact on Climate" by Thomas R. Karl and Kevin E. Trenberth Scientific American, December 1999 "The balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate." With these carefully chosen words, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (jointly supported... | |
| Richard C. Ragaini, Antonino Zichichi - 2006 - 490 pages
...that characterized the IPCC Second Assessment and served as the smoking gun for the Kyoto agreement: The balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate. The IPCC statement is simply an abbreviation of the basic agreement with the addition of a small measure... | |
| Paul G. Harris - 2007 - 432 pages
...sources of observed global warming over the last 50 years, further strengthening the SAR's conclusion that the 'balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate' (IPCC 1995; reaffirmed in IPCC 2001).7 Warming over the last 100 years is unlikely to have been natural,... | |
| Robert L. Evans - 2007 - 169 pages
...increased levels of CO2 in the atmosphere are necessarily a bad thing. The 1995 IPCC report did conclude that "the balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate," and this was strengthened in the Third Assessment Report of 2001 to "there is new and stronger evidence... | |
| Robert L. Evans - 2007 - 196 pages
...increased levels of CO2 in the atmosphere are necessarily a bad thing. The 1995 IPCC report did conclude that "the balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate," and this was strengthened in the Third Assessment Report of 2001 to "there is new and stronger evidence... | |
| Michele M. Betsill, Elisabeth Corell - 2007 - 264 pages
...Panel on Climate Change in 1995, that the scientific community made its now infamous statement that the "the balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate" (IPCC 1995). 5. These issues are discussed in greater detail below. 6. The United States and Australia... | |
| Mike Bryon - 2008 - 240 pages
...likely to be due to the increase in greenhouse gas concentrations. C. In 1995 the third report concluded that the balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate. D. And the first report in 1990, by comparison, asserted that warming is broadly consistent with current... | |
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