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Germans sceptical of climate

2010-04-28 09:20
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Berlin - Climate change is showing no signs of slowing despite a severe winter in Germany that helped reduce public concerns about the threat of global warming, Germany's leading meteorologist said on Tuesday.

Wolfgang Kusch, president of the German Meteorological Service (DWD), said it was a mistake to interpret the harsh winter of 2009/10 as a sign climate change is abating. A German opinion poll recently found fears of climate change falling sharply.

"Despite fluctuations, temperatures are still moving in one direction - higher," he said. "Climate researchers have to look at least 30-year periods when talking about trends... At the same time the last decade was the warmest in Germany in 130 years."

Scepticism about climate change has been growing in Germany, one of the world's four largest industrial countries, after an unusually long and cold winter in northern Europe.

An opinion poll by the Infratest institute in Der Spiegel magazine found 42% of Germans are concerned about climate change, down from 62% in 2006. A third do not think the climate change research is reliable and a quarter believe Germany will actually profit from climate change.

Profiteers

Scientists say global warming could upset weather patterns, bringing flooding to low-lying areas throughout the world and disrupting agriculture in many regions, not least in the poorer, developing world.

DWD officials said on Tuesday rising temperatures in Germany could indeed turn out to be a boon for local farmers. They said the average annual temperature in Germany has risen by 1.1C over the past 130 years.

By the end of the century, the DWD expects temperatures in Germany to increase by 2C to 4C. The findings have particular ramifications for farmers, said Paul Becker, a DWD board member in charge of the climate and environment unit.

"The northern European agriculture sector will be one of the profiteers of climate change," Becker said. "The temperature rise will expand their growing possibilities considerably."

Becker said rising temperature will lead German farmers to plant various types of corn that mature at warmer temperatures. As winters grow milder, farmers could also plant various types of cereals. That will lead to a higher income for farmers.

"The decisive factor will be whether there will be enough water available," Becker said.

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