VideoDecember 7, 2009

What Is The Difference Between Global Warming and Climate Change?

What Is The Difference Between Global Warming and Climate Change?

Program Summary

Depending on who’s talking, there can be an enormous difference between global warming and climate change — or no difference at all.

A lot of people, including many journalists who write about the topic, use the two terms interchangeably. When reporters first began doing stories back in the late 1980s about how humans seemed to be doing things that result in heating up the planet, the term they usually used was global warming. That’s because the basic effect of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide is to do exactly that. They trap more and more of the Sun’s energy and drive the average temperature of the planet upward.

But that’s only one dimension of the issue. Average temperature is global. Climate is local, and involves not just average temperature, but also other factors that vary, such as humidity, cloudiness, rain (or snow), how this precipitation is spread throughout the year (does it mostly come in one short burst, or over a rainy season, or evenly all year long, or something in between?). If you live by the sea, ocean currents also make a difference. London, England, is farther north than Montreal, Canada, for example but it has much milder winters, because the Gulf Stream carries warm water across the Atlantic to keep it relatively balmy.

Scientists have learned that raising the Earth’s temperature is very likely to change many of these factors. So while global warming is what’s causing it, what most people are going to notice is not necessarily warming but rather a change in climate.

There’s one more factor. Some people want to emphasize the potentially serious consequences of the problem. Others want to convince everyone to think that it’s not such a big deal, or that humans aren’t really causing the problem in the first place. So they choose one term or the other because they think it sounds more or less scary. But since nobody can agree about which term actually is scarier, both groups use both terms at different times.

That sounds pretty confusing. The bottom line is that while global warming isn’t wrong, climate change more accurately describes what’s happening. That’s a major reason that many people have settled on the latter term.

But most of the time, whether people use global warming or climate change, they’re almost certainly talking about the same thing.