Sir David Attenborough: The Truth About Climate Change

Pauli Fabian
22 Oct 200602:45

Summary

TLDRDans ce document, le légendaire diffuseur Sir David Attenborough aborde la question complexe du changement climatique. Il explique comment distinguer les variations naturelles de celles induites par l'activité humaine. À l'aide d'un graphique illustrant les tendances climatiques, il montre que, bien que le climat soit naturellement variable, une hausse significative de la température a été observée à partir de 1910. Cette augmentation est d'abord attribuée à des facteurs naturels, mais à partir des années 1970, le modèle climatique incluant les facteurs humains, principalement l'effet de serre due aux émissions de carbone, reproduit fidèlement la hausse récente de la température. Cela suggère que l'activité humaine est la cause de ce récent réchauffement climatique.

Takeaways

  • 🌍 La variabilité naturelle du climat est une entité chaotique avec des fluctuations occasionnelles, comme celles liées aux éruptions volcaniques.
  • 📈 Autour de 1910, on observe une tendance à la hausse de la température, marquant le début du réchauffement climatique.
  • 🔍 Pour distinguer les variations naturelles des changements climatiques induits par l'activité humaine, on utilise des modèles climatiques.
  • 🌿 Le modèle climatique incluant uniquement les facteurs naturels (courbe verte) reproduit bien le réchauffement du milieu-siècle.
  • 🚀 À partir de 1970, l'écart entre la courbe verte et la courbe rouge (températures observées) indique un changement climatique non expliqué par les facteurs naturels.
  • 🌡️ L'inclusion des facteurs humains, en particulier de l'effet de serre due au carbone, dans le modèle climatique (courbe jaune) reproduit le réchauffement rapide récent.
  • 🌟 La comparaison des courbes jaune et rouge montre que le réchauffement climatique récent est dû aux activités humaines.
  • 🔬 Les modèles climatiques sont fiables car ils reproduisent les variations climatiques observées dans le monde réel.
  • ❗️ Il n’y a pas de doute que l’augmentation rapide de la température observée depuis les années 1970 est due à l’activité humaine.
  • 🌱 Sans l'impact des activités humaines, le changement de température depuis les années 1970 aurait été nettement moins prononcé.

Outlines

00:00

🌍 Révélations sur le réchauffement climatique

Le présentateur, Sir David Attenborough, aborde la question complexe de distinguer entre les variations climatiques dues à des causes naturelles et celles induites par l'activité humaine. Il est convaincu par un graphique montrant la variabilité naturelle du climat, avec des pics et des creux, et une tendance à la hausse autour de 1910 qui suggère un réchauffement climatique. Un modèle climatique incluant uniquement des facteurs naturels, comme les éruptions volcaniques et l'activité solaire, peut expliquer le réchauffement jusqu'au milieu du siècle. Cependant, à partir de 1970, la courbe des températures observées diverge de celle des facteurs naturels, suggérant un réchauffement accéléré dû aux activités humaines. L'ajout des facteurs humains, en particulier l'effet de serre provenant des émissions de dioxyde de carbone, permet au modèle de reproduire ce réchauffement rapide, indiquant que l'activité humaine est responsable de l'augmentation des températures observée depuis les années 1970.

Highlights

Sir David Attenborough speaks out about global warming for the first time.

The challenge is to distinguish between natural climate variations and those induced by human activity.

A graph is used to illustrate the significance of climate change over time.

Climate is naturally variable, with occasional downward trends due to volcanic activity.

Around 1910, an upward trend in global warming begins to emerge.

The debate centers on whether this warming is due to human activity or natural causes.

Climate models are used to simulate the impact of natural factors like volcanic eruptions and solar output.

The mid-century warming can be reasonably explained by natural factors.

From the 1970s onwards, observed temperatures diverge from the model predicting natural factors alone.

The recent warming trend cannot be explained by natural factors alone.

Including human factors, especially carbon dioxide emissions, in the model reproduces the recent rapid warming.

The model suggests that recent warming is due to human activities.

Without human influence, there would have been significantly less temperature change since the 1970s.

The evidence points to a steep rise in temperature due to human activity.

The natural variability of climate is clear, but human actions have a significant impact on temperature changes.

Transcripts

play00:01

the passionate eye now returns to the

play00:04

truth about global warming for the first

play00:07

time legendary broadcaster Sir David

play00:09

Attenborough speaks out about global

play00:12

warming the key question of course is

play00:16

how can we distinguish between

play00:19

variations due to natural causes and

play00:21

those variations of the climate that are

play00:25

induced by human activity and the key

play00:30

thing that convinced me at any rate was

play00:33

a graph like this one that we marked out

play00:35

on the floor that had been prepared from

play00:38

climate scientists like Professor Peter

play00:40

Cox now explain to us the significance

play00:43

of this graph ok what we're going to do

play00:45

is to take a walk through time and the

play00:47

first thing to note as we walk through

play00:49

is that the climate is naturally

play00:50

variable it's a spiky beast occasionally

play00:53

there's a downward trend that's

play00:54

associated with a volcano going off the

play00:56

corsa system down because of the dust it

play00:58

throws up but generally it just

play00:59

oscillates around and then we get to a

play01:01

period around about 1910 where you can

play01:04

start seeing upward trend a warming of

play01:06

the climate and global warming if you

play01:08

like and the issue is what caused that

play01:11

was that humans or was that natural so

play01:13

what we do to try and work that one out

play01:15

is to take a climate model and to put in

play01:17

the various factors and what we can see

play01:19

with its green curve here is a climate

play01:20

model that includes just these natural

play01:23

factors so this is when volcanoes go off

play01:25

and the output from the Sun and you can

play01:27

see that the green curve can reproduce

play01:29

reasonably well this mid-century warming

play01:31

so up to this point you could reasonably

play01:33

argue climate variation can be explained

play01:36

by natural factors but as we move on we

play01:39

can see that's no longer true as you get

play01:41

to the latter part of the 20th century

play01:43

from about 1970 onwards here

play01:45

you can see the red curve the observed

play01:46

temperatures and the green curve really

play01:48

beginning to diverge and the question

play01:51

again is what caused this recent warming

play01:53

so we run the model again and we include

play01:55

human factors particularly we include

play01:57

the greenhouse effect from mostly from

play01:59

carbon dioxide that comes

play02:01

possibly burning and then we get this

play02:03

yellow curve and we can see as well as

play02:05

reproducing the mid-century warming we

play02:08

get this recent rather rapid warming

play02:10

reproduced and that tells us two things

play02:13

one is that the model looks realistic it

play02:15

looks like the real world and the second

play02:16

thing the model tells us that this

play02:18

recent warming is due to human beings so

play02:21

there you have it the seems little doubt

play02:24

that this recent rise is steep rise in

play02:28

temperature is due to human activity if

play02:33

you look at the green line of natural

play02:35

variability it's clear that without the

play02:38

action of human beings there would have

play02:40

been far less temperature change since

play02:42

the 1970s

Rate This

5.0 / 5 (0 votes)

Étiquettes Connexes
Réchauffement climatiqueActivité humaineModèle climatiqueEffet de serreVariabilité naturelleVolcansÉvolution climatiqueSir David AttenboroughProfesseur Peter CoxScience climatique