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NewsNovember 2, 2014

COPENHAGEN, Denmark -- The United Nations' expert panel on climate science on Saturday finished a report on global warming the UN's environment agency said offers "conclusive evidence" humans are altering the Earth's climate system. The document, which combines the findings of three earlier reports, was adopted after all-night talks Saturday by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and is scheduled to be released to the public today...

By KARL RITTER ~ Associated Press

COPENHAGEN, Denmark -- The United Nations' expert panel on climate science on Saturday finished a report on global warming the UN's environment agency said offers "conclusive evidence" humans are altering the Earth's climate system.

The document, which combines the findings of three earlier reports, was adopted after all-night talks Saturday by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and is scheduled to be released to the public today.

Apart from discussing the human influence, it is expected to describe how climate impacts, including melting Arctic sea ice and rising levels, are happening and could become irreversible unless the world curbs its greenhouse gas emissions.

The IPCC says scientists now are 95 percent certain the buildup of such gases from the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation is the main cause of warming seen since the middle of the 20th century.

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IPCC vice chairman Jean-Pascal van Ypersele wrote on Twitter the report was adopted Saturday after round-the-clock talks. The U.N. Environment Program said the report "offers conclusive scientific evidence that human activities continue to cause unprecedented changes in the Earth's climate."

UNEP head Achim Steiner said the world has the technology and capacity to act and needs to do so urgently. The cost of achieving emissions cuts increases exponentially with each year "because you will have to make far more drastic changes in our economy," Steiner said.

While the IPCC tries to avoid explicitly telling governments what they should do, the report will present scenarios showing that warming can be kept in check if the world shifts its energy system toward renewable sources such as wind and solar power and implements technologies to capture greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.

Scientists and government representatives, who jointly approved the document line by line, worked all night until 5 a.m. Saturday, then rested for a few hours before resuming the session in Copenhagen.

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