Climate Change: The Carbon Factor
Narration: Katy Mersmann
Transcript:
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The release of carbon, mostly carbon dioxide
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from human activities like driving cars, flying planes, and industrial burning
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of fossil fuels is responsible for the majority of climate change.
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Carbon exists in stores underground,
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as oil, gas and coal.
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When we burn it, we release
it into our atmosphere, where it traps
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excess heat coming from
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the Sun, raising the temperature.
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We’ve known for more than a century
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that carbon dioxide added to our atmosphere traps
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additional heat and is a major contributor
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to the greenhouse effect.
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So we can also track the
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concentration of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere,
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the primary cause of the current
climate change.
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Both from space -- using NASA satellites like
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the Orbiting Carbon Observatories 2 and 3 -- and from the ground.
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If you’ve heard of the Keeling Curve, you’re familiar with one of these records.
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Researchers have been taking daily
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measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide from Mauna Loa, Hawaii,
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since the 1950s.
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From space and the ground,
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the signal is clear:
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There’s a lot more carbon in the atmosphere than there used to be.