10.3. "¿Qué se desconoce?
Scientists have identified that our health, agriculture,
water resources, forests, wildlife and coastal areas are vulnerable
to the changes that global warming may bring. But projecting what
the exact impacts will be over the 21st century remains very difficult.
This is especially true when one asks how a local region will be
affected.
Scientists are more confident about their projections
for large-scale areas (e.g., global temperature and precipitation
change, average sea level rise) and less confident about the ones
for small-scale areas (e.g., local temperature and precipitation
changes, altered weather patterns, soil moisture changes). This
is largely because the computer models used to forecast global climate
change are still ill-equipped to simulate how things may change
at smaller scales. [See the U.S.
Clima section for more detail on climate
models.]
Some of the largest uncertainties are associated
with events that pose the greatest risk to human societies. IPCC
cautions, "Complex systems, such as the climate
system, can respond in non-linear ways and produce surprises."
There is the possibility that a warmer world could lead to more
frequent and intense storms, including hurricanes. Preliminary evidence
suggests that, once hurricanes do form, they will be stronger if
the oceans are warmer due to global warming . However, the jury
is still out whether or not hurricanes and other storms will become
more frequent.
More and more attention is being aimed at the possible
link between El Niño events the periodic warming of
the equatorial Pacific Ocean and global warming . Scientists
are concerned that the accumulation of greenhouse gases could inject
enough heat into Pacific waters such that El Niño events
become more frequent and fierce. Here too, research has not advanced
far enough to provide conclusive statements about how global warming
will affect El Niño."
Fuente
y ©: US
EPA
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