Warming
in sentence
1698 examples of Warming in a sentence
Models shows global
warming
will increase the incidence of malaria by about 3% by the end of the century, because mosquitoes are more likely to survive when the world gets hotter.
But, for every problem that global
warming
will exacerbate – hurricanes, hunger, flooding – we could achieve tremendously more through cheaper, direct policies today.
But climate models demonstrate that Germany’s $156 billion expense will delay
warming
by just one hour at the end of the century.
Most economic models show that the total damage imposed by global
warming
by the end of the century will be about 3% of GDP.
Even so, Bolsonaro and his three eldest sons – all of them elected officials – regularly describe global
warming
as a fraud.
The Relative Unimportance of Global WarmingGlobal
warming
has become the preeminent concern of our time.
Many governments and most campaigners meeting in Montreal now throughDecember 9tell us that dealing with global
warming
should be our first priority.
Negotiating a follow-up treaty to the Kyoto Protocol, they argue, requires that we seek even deeper cuts in the pollution that causes global
warming.
As a result, we risk losing sight of tackling the world’s most important problems first, as well as missing the best long-term approach to global
warming.
To be sure, global
warming
is real, and it is caused by CO2.
Yet, even if everyone (including the United States) lived up to the protocol’s rules, and stuck to it throughout the century, the change would be almost immeasurable, postponing
warming
for just six years in 2100.
Global
warming
will mainly harm developing countries, because they are poorer and therefore more vulnerable to the effects of climate change.
So early action on global
warming
is basically a costly way of doing very little for much richer people far in the future.
This would be much cheaper and ultimately much more effective in dealing with global
warming.
In the long run, such actions are likely to make a much greater impact on global
warming
than Kyoto-style responses.
By this standard, global
warming
doesn’t come close.
The New Climate EconomicsNEW YORK – This Friday, in its latest comprehensive assessment of the evidence on global warming, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change will show that the world’s climate scientists are more certain than ever that human activity – largely combustion of fossil fuels – is causing temperatures and sea levels to rise.
According to a 2013 survey of peer-reviewed publications on the subject, some 97% of scientists endorse the position that humans are causing global
warming.
Of the party’s dozen presidential candidates, only two (Mitt Romney and Jon Huntsman) declined to reject scientific evidence concerning global
warming
and its human causes.
Obama had rejected that project on the grounds that it would aggravate global
warming.
They are prepared to look like fools in public – denying climate science and global
warming
– as long as it keeps the campaign money flowing.
First, Trump can’t stop the waves, or the rising ocean levels in the case of global
warming.
The oceans are
warming
dramatically (recently damaging 93% of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef in the process).
Terrorism, the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, genocide, poverty, hunger, global warming, huge natural disasters, and the spread of deadly diseases such as HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis all exemplify global challenges that require multilateral solutions.
BERKELEY – In recent months, China has taken center stage in the international debate over global
warming.
Now China may become the target of a full-fledged trade war that could destroy – or perhaps rescue – the chances of bringing rich and poor nations together to fight global
warming.
The tariff proposal – contained in the central piece of global
warming
legislation now before Congress – would impose emission controls on domestic industries starting in 2012.
Despite the threat of trade wars, trade sanctions could emerge as the most effective means of forcing international action on global
warming.
Consider, for example, the biggest challenge facing us, which deserves to be called existential: global
warming
and climate change.
Global warming, he explained on national television, “is just a state of mind.”
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