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| "The opportunities that arise in the meeting between green projects and commercial interests." |
| Microgreen, Arendal |
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What does research tell us today?
The greenhouse effect is far from being a new discovery. It was described for the first time in 1824 by the French physicist Jean Fourier. In 1896 the Swede Svante Arrhenius did the first calculations of its magnitude.
And yet researchers are still learning about climate and the earth – first and foremost because the atmosphere, the sea, and the land surface are complex systems with complex interactions. It is difficult to determine an overall picture, but massive research efforts are increasing our understanding of climate development, and what we can do about it.
Climate change research is developing fast, partly due to increasing awareness of the issue.
One of the trends of climate research is that it increasingly spreads into other areas than natural science, technology and economics.
At the same time as global warming has become the subject of global political and commercial focus, social and humanistic research has increasingly begun to address the consequences of a changing climate for society and humans.
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