At best, the empirical evidence for human impact on climate change, more specifically, the anthropogenic global warming (AGW),
is based on correlational research. That is, no experiment has been carried out that confirms or falsifies the causal hypothesis
put forward by the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) that anthropogenic increasing of green house gas concentrations
very likely causes increasing of the (mean) global temperature. In this article, we point out the major weaknesses of correlational
research in assessing causal hypotheses. We further point out that the AGW hypothesis is in need of potential falsifiers in
the Popperian (neopositivistic) sense. Some directions for future research on the formulation of such falsifiers in causal
research are discussed. Of course, failure to find falsifying evidence in empirical climate data will render the AWG hypothesis
much stronger.