I see somebody didn't look at the peer reviewed paper I posted...
Just curious, but does anybody else remember in the 1970's when there was a big "scare" that we were entering into another ice age?
I should also add that in this same period of time hydrocarbon use increased 3-fold.
The Earth has been warming as it recovers from the Little Ice Age at an average rate of about 0.5 ºC per century. Fluctuations within this temperature trend include periods of more rapid increase and also periods of temperature decrease. These fluctuations correlate well with concomitant fluctuations in the activity of the sun. Neither the trends nor the fluctuations within the trends correlate with hydrocarbon use. Sea level and glacier length reveal three intermediate uptrends and two downtrends since 1800, as does solar activity. These trends are climatically benign and result from natural processes.
According to this trend, in the next hundred years we will see a .9 degree Fahrenheit increase in temperature if the current trend continues.
So Morray37, in the 25 year span you suggested, you will see an .225 increase in temperature Fahrenheit.
A hundred years is about right for a 1 degree F temp. increase.
and I would leave you with the following...
Human activities are producing part of the rise in CO2 in the atmosphere. Mankind is moving the carbon in coal, oil, and natural gas from below ground to the atmosphere, where it is available for conversion into living things. We are living in an increasingly lush environment of plants and animals as a result of this CO2 increase. Our children will therefore enjoy an Earth with far more plant and animal life than that with which we now are blessed.