Bill Nye has been the go-to science guy for teachers and students for decades, most notably with his PBS show, “Bill Nye the Science Guy.”

In recent years, he has been vocal advocate for battling climate change. That will be a featured topic in his new show, “The End is Nye,” which is scheduled to air later this year on Peacock.

Nye spoke to USA TODAY this week to answer some of the most commonly Googled questions about climate change and global warming.

What is global warming? When did it start? How does climate change affect humans, animals and the ocean?

The “science guy” himself has answers to those questions and more. Here’s what he had to say.

Note: Responses have been edited for length and clarity.

More from Bill Nye:‘I was ticked off’: Bill Nye talks viral TikTok, reflects on ‘Science Guy’ success

Climate change: Here’s the thing about that dire climate report: We have the tools we need to fix things

What is climate change?

Nye: So global warming is causing climate change. By holding this extra heat in the atmosphere, we are changing the world’s climate faster than ever in recorded history, but faster than ever in Earth’s history with the exception of when asteroids hit the Earth.

What is global warming?

Nye: Humans are adding an extraordinary amount of extra greenhouse gases; the biggest one is carbon dioxide, and then methane. We’re adding these gases to the atmosphere so fast that the world has never gotten this warm this fast.

Visible light comes through past these molecules, like carbon dioxide, hits the Earth’s surface where it goes to a longer wavelength, to infrared. These gases hold in a lot of that infrared, that heat.