Climate Change Timeline
From The Encyclopedia of Earth
May 21, 2008, 8:20 pm
July 7, 2012, 6:34 pm
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EDITOR'S NOTE:
This article was originally published by the American Institute of Physics and {C}Spencer Weart as Timeline of Milestones. The original version contains detailed references and links to additional information on the history of climate change science.
1800-1870
- Level of carbon dioxide gas (CO2) in the atmosphere, as later measured in ancient ice, is about 290 ppm (parts per million). Mean global temperature (1850-1870) is about 13.6°C.
- First Industrial Revolution. Coal, railroads, and land clearing speed up greenhouse gas emission, while better agriculture and sanitation speed up population growth (Human population explosion).
1824
- Joseph Fourier calculates that the Earth would be far colder if it lacked an atmosphere.
1859
- Tyndall discovers that some gases block infrared {C}radiation. He suggests that changes in the concentration of the gases could bring climate change.
1896
- Arrhenius publishes first calculation of global warming from human emissions of CO2.
1897
- Chamberlin produces a model for global carbon exchange including feedbacks.
1870-1910
- Second Industrial Revolution. Fertilizers and other chemicals, electricity, and public health further accelerate growth.
1914-1918
- World War I; governments learn to mobilize and control industrial societies.
1920-1925
- Opening of Texas and Persian Gulf oil fields inaugurates era of cheap energy.
1930s
- Global warming trend since late 19th century reported.
- Milankovitch proposes orbital changes as the cause of ice ages and interglacial global warming.
1938
- Callendar argues that CO2 greenhouse global warming is underway, reviving interest in the question.
1939-1945
- World War II. Grand strategy is largely driven by a struggle to control oil fields.
1945
- US Office of Naval Research begins generous funding of many fields of science, some of which happen to be useful for understanding climate change.
1956
- Ewing and Donn offer a feedback model for quick ice age onset.
- Phillips produces a somewhat realistic computer model of the global atmosphere.
- Plass calculates that adding CO2 to the atmosphere will have a significant effect on the radiation balance.
1957
- Launch of Soviet Sputnik satellite. Cold War concerns support 1957-58 International Geophysical Year, bringing new funding and coordination to climate studies.
- Revelle finds that CO2 produced by humans will not be readily absorbed by the oceans.
1958
- Telescope studies show a greenhouse effect raises temperature of the atmosphere of Venus far above the boiling point of water.
1960
- Downturn of global temperatures since the early 1940s is reported.
- Keeling accurately measures CO2 in the Earth's atmosphere and detects an annual rise. The level is 315 ppm. Mean global temperature (five-year average) is 13.9°C.
1962
- Cuban Missile Crisis, peak of the Cold War.
1963
- Calculations suggest that feedback with water vapor could make the climate acutely sensitive to changes in CO2 level.
1965
- Boulder, Colo. meeting on causes of climate change: Lorenz and others point out the chaotic nature of climate system and the possibility of sudden shifts.
1966
- Emiliani's analysis of deep-sea cores shows the timing of ice ages was set by small orbital shifts.
1967
- International Global Atmospheric Research Program established, mainly to gather data for better short-range weather prediction, but including climate.
- Manabe and Wetherald make a convincing calculation that doubling CO2 would raise world temperatures a couple of degrees.
1968
- Studies suggest a possibility of collapse of Antarctic ice sheets, which would raise sea levels significantly.
1969
- Astronauts walk on the Moon, and people perceive the Earth as a fragile whole.
- Budyko and Sellers present models of catastrophic ice-albedo feedbacks.
- Nimbus III satellite begins to provide comprehensive global atmospheric temperature measurements.
1970
- First Earth Day. Environmental movement attains strong influence, spreads concern about global degradation, including forests, oceans and biotic habitat
- Creation of US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the world's leading funder of climate research.
- Aerosols from human activity are shown to be increasing swiftly. Bryson claims they counteract global warming and may bring serious cooling.
1971
- SMIC conference of leading scientists reports a danger of rapid and serious global change caused by humans, calls for an organized research effort.
- Mariner 9 spacecraft finds a great dust storm warming the atmosphere of Mars, plus indications of a radically different climate in the past .
1972
- Ice cores and other evidence show large climate shifts in the past between relatively stable modes in the space of a thousand years or so, especially around 11,000 years ago.
1973
- Oil embargo and price rise bring first "energy crisis".
1974
- Droughts and other unusual weather since 1972 increase scientific and public concern about climate change, with cooling from aerosols suspected to be as likely as warming; journalists talk of ice age.
1975
- Concern about environmental effects of airplanes leads to investigations of trace gases in the stratosphere and discovery of danger to ozone layer (Antarctic ozone hole).
- Manabe and collaborators produce complex but plausible computer models which show a temperature rise of several degrees for doubled CO2.
1976
- Studies show that CFCs (1975) and also methane and ozone (1976) can make a serious contribution to the greenhouse effect.
- Deep-sea cores show a dominating influence from 100,000-year Milankovitch orbital changes, emphasizing the role of feedbacks.
- Deforestation and other ecosystem changes are recognized as major factors in the future of the climate.
- Eddy shows that there were prolonged periods without sunspots in past centuries, corresponding to cold periods.
1977
- Scientific opinion tends to converge on global warming, not cooling, as the chief climate risk in next century.
1978
- Attempts to coordinate climate research in US end with an inadequate National Climate Program Act, accompanied by rapid but temporary growth in funding.
1979
- Second oil "energy crisis." Strengthened environmental movement encourages renewable energy sources, inhibits nuclear energy growth.
- US National Academy of Sciences report finds it highly credible that doubling CO2 will bring 1.5-4.5°C global warming.
- World Climate Research Programme launched to coordinate international research.
1981
- Election of Reagan brings backlash against environmental movement to power. Political conservatism is linked to skepticism about global warming.
- IBM Personal Computer introduced. Advanced economies are increasingly delinked from energy.
- Hansen and others show that sulfate aerosols can significantly cool the climate, raising confidence in models showing future greenhouse warming.
- Some scientists predict greenhouse warming "signal" should be visible by about the year 2000.
1982
- Greenland ice cores reveal drastic temperature oscillations in the space of a century in the distant past.
- Clear short term global warming since mid-1970s is reported, with 1981 the warmest year on record.
1983
- Reports from US National Academy of Sciences and Environmental Protection Agency spark conflict, as greenhouse warming becomes prominent in mainstream politics.
1985
- Ramanathan and collaborators announce that methane and other trace gases together could bring as much global warming as CO2 itself.
- Villach conference declares consensus among experts that some global warming seems inevitable, calls on governments to consider international agreements to restrict emissions.
- Antarctic ice cores show that CO2 and temperature went up and down together through past ice ages, pointing to powerful biological and geochemical feedbacks.
- Broecker speculates that a reorganization of North Atlantic Ocean circulation can bring swift and radical climate change.
1987
- Montreal Protocol of the Vienna Convention imposes international restrictions on emission of ozone-destroying gases.
1988
- News media coverage of global warming leaps upward following recent heat and droughts plus testimony by Hansen.
- Toronto conference calls for strict, specific limits on greenhouse gas emissions; UK Prime Minister Thatcher is first major leader to call for action.
- Ice-core and biology studies confirm living ecosystems give climate feedback by way of methane, which could accelerate global warming.
- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is established.
1989
- Fossil-fuel and other industries form Global Climate Coalition in US to lobby politicians and convince the media and public that climate science is too uncertain to justify action.
1990
- First IPCC report says world has been warming and future warming seems likely. Industry lobbyists and some scientists dispute the tentative conclusions.
1991
- Mt. Pinatubo explodes; Hansen predicts cooling pattern, verifying (by 1995) computer models of aerosol effects.
- Global warming skeptics emphasize studies indicating that a significant part of 20th-century temperature changes were due to solar influences. (The correlation would fail in the following decade.)
- Studies from 55 million years ago show possibility of eruption of methane from the seabed with enormous self-sustained warming.
1992
- Conference in Rio de Janeiro produces UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, but US blocks calls for serious action.
- Study of ancient climates reveals climate sensitivity in same range as predicted independently by computer models.
1993
- Greenland ice cores suggest that great climate changes (at least on a regional scale) can occur in the space of a single decade.
1995
- Second IPCC report detects "signature" of human-caused greenhouse effect warming, declares that serious warming is likely in the coming century.
- Reports of the breaking up of some Antarctic ice shelves and other signs of actual current warming in polar regions begin affecting public opinion.
1997
- Toyota introduces Prius in Japan, first mass-market electric hybrid car; swift progress in large wind turbines and other energy alternatives.
- International conference produces Kyoto Protocol, setting targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions if enough nations sign onto a treaty.
1998
- "Super El Niño" causes weather disasters and warmest modern year (approximately matched by 2005 and 2007). Borehole data confirm extraordinary warming trend.
- Qualms about arbitrariness in computer models diminish as teams model ice-age climate and dispense with special adjustments to reproduce current climate.
1999
- Criticism that satellite measurements show no warming are dismissed by National Academy Panel.
- Ramanathan detects massive "brown cloud" of aerosols from South Asia.
2000
- Global Climate Coalition dissolves as many corporations grapple with threat of warming, but oil lobby convinces US administration to deny problem.
- Variety of studies emphasize variability and importance of biological feedbacks in carbon cycle, liable to accelerate warming.
2001
- Third IPCC report states baldly that global warming, unprecedented since end of last ice age, is "very likely," with possible severe surprises. Effective end of debate among all but a few scientists.
- Bonn meeting, with participation of most countries but not US, develops mechanisms for working towards Kyoto targets.
- National Academy panel sees a "paradigm shift" in scientific recognition of the risk of abrupt climate change (decade-scale).
- Warming observed in ocean basins; match with computer models gives a clear signature of greenhouse effect warming.
2002
- Studies find surprisingly strong "global dimming," due to pollution, has retarded arrival of greenhouse warming, but dimming is now decreasing.
2003
- Numerous observations raise concern that collapse of ice sheets (West Antarctica, Greenland) can raise sea levels faster than some had believed.
- Deadly summer heat wave in Europe accelerates divergence between European and US public opinion.
2004
- In controversy over temperature data covering past millenium, most conclude climate variations were substantial, but not comparable to post-1980 warming.
- First major books, movie and art work featuring global warming appear.
2005
- Kyoto treaty goes into effect, signed by major industrial nations except US. Work to retard emissions accelerates in Japan, Western Europe, US regional governments and corporations.
- Hurricane Katrina and other major tropical storms spur debate over impact of global warming on storm intensity.
2007
- Fourth IPCC report warns that serious effects of warming have become evident; cost of reducing emissions would be far less than the damage they will cause.
- Level of CO2 in the atmosphere reaches 382 ppm. Mean global temperature (five-year average) is 14.5°C, the warmest in hundreds of years.