Climate Crisis
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Climate: the great unknown
Weather and climate are often confused, but while related they describe different phenomena. Many factors influence each, and the decisive one is the time scale used to observe them. Weather describes the state of the atmosphere at a specific place and moment (e.g., it’s raining in the mountains today while the coast is clear and warm). Climate, by contrast, is the long-term pattern of atmospheric conditions in a region, typically assessed over 20–30 years.
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Teachers / Educators
Upper-secondary students
Primary students / Lower-secondary students
Curious by nature
The Climate Crisis
Earth’s climate has changed many times over the planet’s geological history. The alternation of cold periods—marked by ice sheets reaching even low latitudes—and warm periods—marked by rising temperatures and sea levels—stems from cyclical astronomical movements of the planet and its position relative to the Sun. Evidence of these long-term, periodic shifts (on the order of roughly ten thousand years) is preserved in fossils, landforms, rocks, and ice.
Since the Industrial Era, however, greenhouse gases from human activities have risen steadily, triggering a rapid, profound climate crisis—the greatest emergency the planet faces today. Forecasting weather patterns and how the climate is changing is complex, and managing the resulting impacts is challenging. What is certain, though, is that the single most important element helping to regulate Earth’s climate—and to buffer the effects of human activity—is the Global Ocean.
We thank Luca Mercalli for his video contribution.
Oceans and Climate Change
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Understanding the relationship between the Global Ocean and climate helps us use natural resources wisely, safeguard ecosystems and threatened species, and make responsible choices for the future.
Who Discovered Global Warming
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Climatology—by comparing today’s phenomena with those of the past—shows a strong correlation between the current climate crisis and human activities.
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