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U.N. Issues New Global Warming Warning

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Associated Press

The Earth’s temperature in 2001 is expected to be the second highest since global records began 140 years ago, the U.N. weather agency said Tuesday, more proof, it declared, of global warming caused by humans.

The World Meteorological Organization said the warming temperatures led to an increase in the severity and frequency of storms and droughts and other unusual weather conditions.

“Temperatures are getting hotter, and they are getting hotter faster now than at any time in the past,” said Michel Jarraud, the organization’s deputy secretary-general.

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Nine of the 10 warmest years in the last four decades have occurred since 1990, and temperatures are rising three times faster than in the early 1900s, he said.

This year’s global average surface temperature was expected to be 57.96 degrees Fahrenheit, the U.N. weather agency said. The record, set in 1998, is 58.24 degrees.

“Much of the temperature change is put down to human influence,” said Ken Davidson, director of the organization’s climate program department. “There are always skeptics on everything, but certainly the evidence we have today shows we do have global warming, and that most of this is due to human action.”

Carbon dioxide produced from burning fossil fuels is the most prevalent of the so-called greenhouse gases, whose growing concentration in the atmosphere is thought to be warming the Earth. Many scientists believe the warming, if not stopped, will cause severe climate changes over the next century.

Few critics disagree that global warming exists. But opinions diverge when scientists forecast the severity of the temperature changes and their effects, with many skeptics believing that the Earth’s atmosphere will adjust.

At a conference in Morocco last month, negotiators from 160 countries agreed on rules for implementing the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which calls on about 40 industrialized nations to limit carbon emissions.

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The United States, the world’s largest polluter, has rejected the accord.

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