| Sun Cycles Not Key To Recent Global Warming - Expert 
    US: April 24, 2008
 
 
 SAN ANTONIO, Texas - Satellite data show that changes in the sun are 
    contributing to global warming but to a smaller extent than human activity, 
    a space scientist at the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington told a 
    group of petroleum geologists Wednesday.
 
 
 "The sun is playing a role that you can detect, but it's not the dominant 
    role," Judith Lean told a crowded session at the 2008 convention of the 
    American Association of Petroleum Geologists in San Antonio.
 
 Climate-change sceptics have suggested that solar cycles may be more 
    responsible than human activity for increasing global temperature. But Lean 
    said her findings showed "the sun is a factor of 10 less than the 
    anthropogenic."
 
 Scientists at the forum listed causes for climate change including 
    alterations in the atmosphere's makeup, changes in forests or ice covering 
    the land, volcanoes, man-made greenhouse gases, solar cycles and factors yet 
    undiscovered.
 
 "We're not in an either-or world," said Kurt Cuffey, geography department 
    chairman at the University of California at Berkeley. "It's all of these 
    thrown together."
 
 The AAPG, whose members work in the oil industry, has an official position 
    backing more study of climate change. AAPG also says human fossil fuel use 
    should be more efficient and greenhouse gases should be cut, but only at 
    reasonable cost.
 
 Eric Barron, geosciences dean at the University of Texas, argued that causal 
    factors in climate change may be interacting in ways not yet imagined. For 
    example, whether carbon dioxide build-up is a cause or effect of temperature 
    rise depends on whether one is talking 30 years or a million years, he said.
 
 In the short run, human activity is putting more carbon dioxide into the 
    air, but in the long run, the impact might be mitigated or made worse by 
    climate responses not yet understood or predicted, he said.
 
 Lean said small changes do not occur in isolation but as part of a larger, 
    ever-changing climate system, and that makes forecasting difficult.
 
 "You've got to be careful, because everything's changing," she said.
 
 Barron called for deeper study of the geologic record to better calibrate 
    computer models predicting the future.
 
 "If you do that, you might find we have even more to worry about," Barron 
    said, adding that the Earth's geologic history has an important climate 
    story to tell. "It shows the climate is very sensitive to small changes," he 
    said.
 
 (Additional reporting by Jim Forsyth; Editing by David Gregorio)
 
 
 Story by Bruce Nichols
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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