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BBC News: What happened to global warming?
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<blockquote data-quote="fact check" data-source="post: 617602" data-attributes="member: 24643"><p>Links to opinion pieces, like Glover's, hardly refute scientific articles.</p><p></p><p>If you'd care to quote from peer reviewed scientific articles that support your ideas, go right ahead.</p><p></p><p>Try some thing like this:</p><p></p><p><em>Professor John Turner of BAS, lead author of the paper published in the Geophysical Research Letters journal, said the results underlined the complexity of climate change.</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>He said: "While there is increasing evidence that the loss of sea ice in the Arctic has occurred due to human activity, in the Antarctic human influence through the ozone hole has had the reverse effect and resulted in more ice.</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>"Although the ozone hole is in many ways holding back the effects of greenhouse gas increases on the Antarctic, this will not last, as we expect ozone levels to recover by the end of the 21st Century.</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>"By then there is likely to be around one third less Antarctic sea ice."</em></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="fact check, post: 617602, member: 24643"] Links to opinion pieces, like Glover's, hardly refute scientific articles. If you'd care to quote from peer reviewed scientific articles that support your ideas, go right ahead. Try some thing like this: [i]Professor John Turner of BAS, lead author of the paper published in the Geophysical Research Letters journal, said the results underlined the complexity of climate change. He said: "While there is increasing evidence that the loss of sea ice in the Arctic has occurred due to human activity, in the Antarctic human influence through the ozone hole has had the reverse effect and resulted in more ice. "Although the ozone hole is in many ways holding back the effects of greenhouse gas increases on the Antarctic, this will not last, as we expect ozone levels to recover by the end of the 21st Century. "By then there is likely to be around one third less Antarctic sea ice."[/i] [/QUOTE]
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