October 27, 2015
        
        
          
            2015 Logan County Farm Outlook Magazine
          
        
        
          LINCOLN DAILY NEWS.COM    Page 45
        
        
          T
        
        
          he debate over climate change and its causes
        
        
          has gone on for decades with research
        
        
          indicating that people are almost evenly divided
        
        
          on the issue.  Though some say human activities
        
        
          have caused climate change that results in
        
        
          problems like global warming, stronger storms,
        
        
          and more droughts, others believe climate changes
        
        
          are a result of natural processes.
        
        
          Surveys illustrate the divide and incongrous
        
        
          conflict over the issue. For example, in a 2013
        
        
          national ‘Climate Change in the American Mind’
        
        
          poll the public perception, especially as it relates
        
        
          to global warming, found “1 in 4 Americans think
        
        
          that global warming is not happening, and half say
        
        
          they are “worried” about it.”
        
        
          A  2015 survey by the Yale Project on Climate
        
        
          Change Communications indicated, “63% of
        
        
          Americans believe global warming is happening,
        
        
          and 48% believe that human activity is primarily
        
        
          responsible.”
        
        
          An Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s
        
        
          2014 synthesis report said, “Human influence on
        
        
          the climate systems is clear.”  And that, “Recent
        
        
          climate changes have had widespread impacts on
        
        
          human and natural systems.”
        
        
          Due to the controversial nature of the topic, public
        
        
          schools are not required to teach climate change,
        
        
          and those who do present the evidence to children,
        
        
          allow them to investigate and make their own
        
        
          decision about the issue.
        
        
          Devin Biggs, a meteorology student at Western
        
        
          Illinois University, said that what he has learned
        
        
          is the weather cycles in patterns that bring both
        
        
          warm and cool cycles. He say they are not being
        
        
          taught about climate change. Bigg said, “I don’t
        
        
          think climate change as they define it is real, but
        
        
          I do believe we see these cycles. El Niño (that
        
        
          we’re in now) and La Niña are big influences of
        
        
          that pattern.”
        
        
          Chris Miller, who works in Lincoln for the
        
        
          National Meteorology Service says, “NOAA’s
        
        
          perspective on climate change is that we are
        
        
          seeing signs of a changing climate in some parts
        
        
          of the world, particularly at the poles and in the
        
        
          higher latitudes. The potential impacts of this
        
        
          Climate change - Is it real?
        
        
          Continued