Signs of a warming world
Global warming: no day at the beach
November 27, 1997
(CNN) -- Anyone who thinks the most notable effect of rising
global temperatures would be the advent of soft spring
breezes from Siberia to the Tierra del Fuego is sorely
mistaken, if scientists' models are to be believed.
The preponderance of scientific thought today sees the next
100 years as a time of traumatic environmental change. The
United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) projects a rise in average global temperature of about
1-3.5 degrees Celsius by the year 2100. Warming in this range
is cause for concern, if not alarm.
Scientific modeling produced by some of the world's most
advanced supercomputers has depicted a series of scenarios
that might result from global warming. Here's a look at what
some scientists say might happen:
Impact on land

The current boundaries of year-round farming are pushed
farther to the north and south as temperatures moderate. But
the lands today considered the bread baskets of the world are
left with reduced crop yields.
Factoid
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The U.N. World Health Organization reported in 1996 that malaria and dengue fever could reach epidemic levels and spread farther from the equator as a result of a warmer climate.
Source: Union of Concerned Scientists
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That's because moisture in the soil evaporates at higher
rates as the overall temperature rises, and soil moisture is
a key to plant growth. So more rain should be falling
somewhere, but it's unlikely to make up for the lost moisture
in what had been the planet's most fertile fields.
The deserts found in the mid-latitudes are also expected to
expand, even as regions of arable land move north and south.
The growth of desert areas can already be observed in North
Africa's voracious Sahara.
- Range of arable land expands south and north
- Soil drier due to higher evaporation rates
- Increased CO2 aids some plant growth
- Habitats for some animals shrink
- Range of insects likely to expand
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Impact on water

Rising waters, the result of melting polar ice caps and
water expansion from increasing warmth, are the most widely
anticipated consequence of a warming world. The U.N.'s IPCC
projects that the world's oceans will rise anywhere from 15
to 95 centimeters by the year 2100.
Factoid
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The Reinsurance Assocation of America, the trade group for the companies which insure insurance companies, have urged strong action on global warming. The five costliest years for U.S. insurance payouts for floods and storms have happened in the 1990s.
Source: Union of Concerned Scientists
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This may not sound like much, but figures at the high end of
that scale would rob a low-lying nation like Bangladesh of
over 20 percent of its arable land. And it could put the city
of New Orleans underwater. At the low end of the scale,
rising waters would increase coastal erosion and heighten the
damaging effects of hurricanes and other coastal storms.
Encroaching salt water has the potential to contaminate the
water supplies that coastal cities and farms depend on. The
rising ocean finds it easier to make its way inland as the
level of coastal rivers and streams drop with the drying of
the soil. Aside from the outright loss of land to the ocean,
the threat of contaminated water supplies is perhaps the most
serious problem posed by rising sea levels.
- Sea level rises due to melting ice caps, warming water
- High water eats away at, or submerges, coastal land
- Sea water contaminates some drinking water supplies
- Water levels drop in some rivers, streams
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Impact on air
What will happen to the atmosphere itself during global
warming is unclear. Cloud cover should increase with the
higher rates of evaporation, but scientists are unsure where
the moisture will go.
Clouds closer to the earth's surface reflect sunlight,
producing an overall cooling effect. Clouds higher up in the
atmosphere, however, have the effect of trapping heat and
warming the planet. Where the extra moisture in the
atmosphere ends up -- high or low -- could determine how much
of an impact of global warming has on the environment.
- Cloud cover increases
- Levels of the greenhouse gas methane may increase
- Hurricanes range farther north, south on warmer water
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