4 Studies Find No Sea-Level Effect from
Global Warming
Ten years after former Vice
President Al Gore warned in his 2006 Oscar-winning
film, An
Inconvenient Truth, that if nothing
was done to stop man-made global warming, melting Antarctic and Greenland ice
sheets could raise sea levels by up to 20 feet, four peer-reviewed scientific
studies found "no observable sea-level effect of anthropogenic global
warming."
"It is widely assumed that sea levels have been rising in recent decades largely in response to anthropogenic global warming," Kenneth Richard writes at NoTricksZone. "However, due to the inherently large contribution of natural oscillatory influences on sea level fluctuations, this assumption lacks substantiation.
"Scientists who have recently attempted to detect an anthropogenic signal in regional sea level rise trends have had to admit that there is 'no observable sea-level effect of anthropogenic global warming'," Richard points out, listing four peer-reviewed studies published this year that have all come to the same conclusion.
"It is widely assumed that sea levels have been rising in recent decades largely in response to anthropogenic global warming," Kenneth Richard writes at NoTricksZone. "However, due to the inherently large contribution of natural oscillatory influences on sea level fluctuations, this assumption lacks substantiation.
"Scientists who have recently attempted to detect an anthropogenic signal in regional sea level rise trends have had to admit that there is 'no observable sea-level effect of anthropogenic global warming'," Richard points out, listing four peer-reviewed studies published this year that have all come to the same conclusion.
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