On Feb. 2, 2007, the United Nations scientific panel studying
climate change declared that the evidence of a warming trend is
“unequivocal”, and that human activity has “very likely” been the driven 【M1】________
force in that change over the last 50 years. The last report by the group,
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, in 2001, had found
that humanity had “likely” played a role.
The addition of that single word “very” did more than reflect to 【M2】________
mounting scientific evidence that the release of carbon dioxide and other
heat-trapping gases from smokestacks, tailpipes and burning forests have 【M3】________
played a central role in raising the average surface temperature of earth 【M4】________
by more than 1 degree Fahrenheit in 1900. It also added new momentum 【M5】_________
to a debate that now seems centered less on that humans are warming the 【M6】_________
planet, but instead on what to do about it. In recent months, business
groups have banded together to make unprecedented calls to federal 【M7】_________
regulation of greenhouse gases. The subject had a red-carpet moment
when former Vice President Al Gore’s documentary, “An Inconvenient
Truth”, was rewarded an Oscar; and the Supreme Court made its first 【M8】_________
global warming-related decision, ruling 5 to 4 that the Environmental
Protection Agency had not justified their position that it was not 【M9】_________
authorized to regulate carbon dioxide.
The latest report from the climate panel predicted that the global
temperature is likely to rise between 3. 5 and 8 degrees Fahrenheit
whether the carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere reaches 【M10】________
twice the level of 1750. By 2100, sea levels are likely to rise between 7
and 23 inches, it said, and the changes now underway will continue for
centuries to come.
【M7】
第二个to—for