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What is Climate?

Climate, sometimes understood as the "average weather,” is defined as the


measurement of the mean and variability of relevant quantities of certain
variables (such as temperature, precipitation or wind) over a period of time,
ranging from months to thousands or millions of years.
The classical period is 30 years, as defined by the World Meteorological
Organization (WMO). Climate in a wider sense is the state, including a
statistical description, of the climate system.

What is the Climate System?


The climate system consists of five major components:
o the atmosphere
o the hydrosphere
o the cryosphere
o land surface
o the biosphere
The climate system is continually changing due to the interactions between
the components as well as external factors such as volcanic eruptions or
solar variations and human-induced factors such as changes to the
atmosphere and changes in land use.

What is the Climate Variability?


Climate Variability is defined as variations in the mean state and other
statistics of the climate on all temporal and spatial scales, beyond individual
weather events.
The term "Climate Variability" is often used to denote deviations of climatic
statistics over a given period of time (e.g. a month, season or year) when
compared to long-term statistics for the same calendar period. Climate
variability is measured by these deviations, which are usually termed
anomalies.
Variability may be due to natural internal processes within the climate
system (internal variability), or to variations in natural or anthropogenic
external factors (external variability).

What is Climate Change?


Climate change refers to a statistically significant variation in either the
mean state of the climate or in its variability, persisting for an extended
period (typically decades or longer).
Climate change may be due to natural internal processes or external factors
such as persistent changes to the atmosphere or changes in land use.
Article 1 of the the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change (UNFCCC) defines "climate change" as:
"a change of climate which is attributed directly or indirectly to human
activity that alters the composition of the global atmosphere and which is
in addition to natural climate variability observed over comparable time
periods”
The UNFCCC thus makes a distinction between "climate change"
attributable to human activities altering the atmospheric composition, and
"climate variability" attributable to natural causes.

What is the difference between Climate Variability and Climate


Change?
In essence, climate variability looks at changes that occur within smaller
timeframes, such as a month, a season or a year, and climate change
considers changes that occur over a longer period of time, typically over
decades or longer.
A key difference between climate variability and change is in persistence of
"anomalous” conditions - when events that used to be rare occur more
frequently, or vice-versa.
In statistical terms, the curve of the frequency distribution representing the
probability of specific meteorological events changes. The curve may be
modified either in amplitude, shifted about a new mean, or both.
Care must be taken not to confuse variability with change. Many regions of
the world experience greater variability, climatologically speaking, than do
others. In some parts of the world, or in any region for certain time periods
or parts of the year, the variability can be weak (i.e. there is not much
difference in the conditions within that time period). In other places or time
periods, the conditions can swing across a large range, from freezing to
very warm, or from very wet to very dry and exhibit strong variability.
A certain amount of this is understood and accepted, instinctively, by the
people in a region. What is "normal" for Denver, Colorado in terms of the
frequency of precipitation events (high variability) would be "abnormal" for
London, England (low variability). Thus, any single event, such as a severe
tropical cyclone, cannot be attributed to human-induced climate change.
Occasionally, an event or sequence of events occurs that has never been
witnessed before (or recorded before), such as the exceptional hurricane
season in the Atlantic in 2005. Yet even that could be part of natural climate
variability. If such a season does not recur within the next 30 years, we
would look back and call it an exceptional year, but not a harbinger of
change. Only a persistent series of unusual events taken in the context of
regional climate parameters can suggest a potential change in climate has
occurred.
The IPCC is conducting considerable efforts in trying to determine, for
various hydrometeorological hazards such as tropical cyclones or tornadoes
and related events such as flash floods, whether there is substantial and
credible evidence of human-induced climate change. The upcoming fourth
assessment report should provide more clarity on this matter.

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