Question:
Global Warming - Does anyone actually believe in it anymore?
2007-06-04 05:55:51 UTC
I had to ask this question as I honestly do not know anyone who believes in it, or maybe they do but they certainly don't believe that us as humans contribute a vast amount in the overall scheme of things (a UN report states that livestock contribute more CO2 than all forms of transport combined). Surely everyone must now see this for the government propaganda that it is; just another way to screw an honest pound out of the hardworking taxpayer. It really makes me sick to hear politicians warbling on about how they are putting taxes up for 'environmental reasons' or to reduce CO2 emissions. Puhleese! I cannot believe that anyone is falling for this nonsense and those that do fall for it and are constantly harping on about saving the planet are putting a big smile on politician's faces as it just keeps on giving them excuses to raise taxes. Stop playing into the politician's hands!
48 answers:
2007-06-05 20:50:08 UTC
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_warming
2007-06-04 07:47:10 UTC
Okay, forget for a moment that you don't know anyone who believes in it, despite the fact that millions of people do, and the vast majority of responsible scientists. Let's look at one example so you can understand the huge mistake you're making.



You cite the UN report about livestock contributing more CO2 than transportation, as if that disproves human contribution to global warming.



First problem: it doesn't matter. Even if most of the sources of CO2 are natural, it only takes a little more from humans to make a big difference - to send us over the top. If you were standing in a pool up to your nose and somebody added just a little more water, you'd still drown.



Second problem: livestock are mostly a human activity! We're the ones keeping livestock, remember? So it counts. But even if it didn't, problem number one is the important point.



How many more mistakes are you making? Go out and learn about this stuff instead of just absorbing crap from the fringes and assuming everything else. There is real science behind this. You are free to criticize the science, but your criticism has to be scientific too.
3DM
2007-06-04 09:18:59 UTC
It's incredible how alarmists are now saying something to the effect, "it doesn't matter if we have exaggerated the human contribution or may be wrong or unsure on the cause of global warming, we should still be conserving." Well, maybe you should have stayed on the last message the whole time instead of using terror tactics. Now you have lost the faith of people this planet needs most.



This is your WMDs-in-Iraq moment: Bush lost most of the support for the war not because people failed to see that Hussain needed to be removed, or that Iraqi democracy is important, it's because those people feel that they were misled to begin with - that we should never have fought that war to begin with. How many people will mistrust environmentalists for years to come when they find out just how much they have been misled?



I care for the environment and do what I feel is an above average job of conserving - not perfect or the absolute best that I can, but I try. It makes me sad to think that people are being turned off towards putting forth a good effort by those who claim to care about the environment the most.
emma m
2007-06-04 12:00:37 UTC
it is just so damn confusing isn't it? - and the way the politicians have jumped on the band wagon just can't help but make us feel a little uneasy about what they are telling us. alhtough i have to say - look at the teeny tiny bit of the atomosphere we occupy and you can imagine the possible damage we could do. and indeed, co2 from cow farts is massive - there is no doubt about it - but it is not solely co2 responsible for or, likely to be responsible for, global warming, there are other gasses involved to. gasses that cows or anything other than a human machine infact, can distribute into our atmosphere - take lead for example ... as i understand it we have many 1000's times the natural levels of lead in our atmosphere than was present before WE put it there - maybe other long term effects are yet to show up.. do you really want to wait until it's too late with global warming?

i suppose part of the darwinian therory is that natural selection means that there must be natural changes taking place all of the time - it is possible that this warming is one of them. i once heard someones theory as this... you know when you get sick, your body warms up and destroys the bacteria causing the illness, mother-earth is doing just that, we human animals are acting like a bacteria - if we took greater care of our planet and behaved like human beings, and strove to live synergistically within out world - surely that would be a better place, with or without the politicians?
Caroline
2007-06-07 10:11:01 UTC
I still think it was mostly caused by us but I also believe it's still a natural process, you know I also think that George Bush is a bit late with his policies (10 years) because the UK started 10 YEARS AGO!!! And he's only just starting!!!! Get real man, can't you see what's happening! England hardly get any snow in winter anymore, it's all boring at Christmas!!!! Spring flowers are blooming a few weeks earlier than normal, we are getting hotter summers!!! There are some very smart scientists out there who know this is happening and they aren't going to lie about something so serious, are they? So why don't you go on the internet and find some global warming websites and read their point of views then maybe you will believe the truth?!!
GreatEnlightened One
2007-06-04 11:06:23 UTC
Ho ,ho , what a good one !

One point : If coal ,gas and oil are the deposits of carbon from the atmoshere an awfully long time ago when the atmoshere was much warmer , accumulated in lifeforms, which were buried and taken out of the equation . And if increased CO2 in the atmosphere does correlate to higher atmosheric temperatures ,then wouldn't re-releasing it increase the temperature now ?

I seem to remember that the UK was once tropical jungle with all the animals now only found in Africa, India etc.,and presumably Africa was a veritable furnace. Why not again ?

If I was African etc, I wouldn't just sit there and respect the rights of northerners to 'their 'land, if mine was becoming uninhabitable.



Even if ,man's contribution (and livestock is also a part of that ) ,was only partially to blame ,it would be in our interests to remove that part ,and minimise the potentially dire consequences. Unless ,of course ,you like the idea ,of world wide famine, and violence ,as everyone scambles for somewhere inhabitable to live .
?
2007-06-04 07:26:22 UTC
A question with...your own "explanation" sorry, but you are more concern where your tax dollars are going. You should of thought about this long ago. Global Warming is indeed happening as we speak, Gore is one of them you speak of! Well, when you have dead fish washed on shores or paid any attention to the claimant around you and other states that have never had such abnormal weather during the four seasons, hot when it's winter, cold when it's summer. Pay more attention, you don't have to believe it to see it, it's happening. So conserve!

For those claiming human life is not responsible, think again, "we" use up transportation like if we had no feet, we use up mega watts of electricity everyday, just to let you all know...the light bill you get every month, that has your mind wondering why it's high if your hardly home, every appliance you have connected to your socket runs up energy, wow! For every plastic bag you get at your grocery store we affect our planet, chemicals are used and wastes is disposed. Into our planet. So think this is due to humans. :O
northcarrlight
2007-06-04 06:23:22 UTC
We are being pushed in the wrong direction on this one - the green vote is gaining in numbers so has to be listened to by the politicians. Sadly its is a case of keeping in with the biggest bully in the playground to survive. The Bodyshop is not ethical that is just a marketing ploy, Simon Cowell is not a saint to disabled children (if you saw his 'life' on TV) comes from money not a working class family, and human beings are still 'very' insignificant compared to mother nature on this planet. The temperature change is a cyclical thing, the Romans grew grapes for wine making in the UK when they were here. Why do the middle class people bleat on about this but do not give up any of their own privileges to ease this so called burden? 1984 by G. Orwell explains the 'misinformation' culture we live in, hope we wise up to this real soon - wake-up call over

Ye what ever did happen to global cooling or the killer wasps from Africa? and that flesh eating disease?
pat
2007-06-07 09:56:43 UTC
Oh, Lance and Look!



How refreshing to find a theory that matches my thoughts on the evolutionary nature of the universe. WE are simply not power full enough to make those kinds of environmental changes.This is big like Continent shifting! We are here observing, witnessing growth and we want to alter the process?



We humans are a just small part of the natural universe, and being natural creatures any contribution or detraction we make is not out of or opposed to the realm of Evolution. Global warming is a natural event, like the birth of a planet of the hatching of an egg. It may very well be necessary to continuity.

Thank you Lance.
mrs sexy pants
2007-06-04 15:54:27 UTC
i think that we are definitely contributing to the ruination of the earth by not conserving energy & polluting the air, and we can do our best to improve, on a personal level, and i'm sure that the more people who try to help, the slower the process will be in regards to global warming, however i don't think that it's possible to reverse it because it is so far beyond "fixing" no matter how many people try. it will have to be a global effort, and we know that's not going to happen. the good thing is that the Bible talks about a hope for the future, the earth being a paradise (Psalm chapter 37 & Revelation 21:3,4 are good scriptures to read) and it also talks about destroying those ruining the earth (Revelation 11:18). so, it will get taken care of, it simply won't be possible by humans.
vahalla7
2007-06-04 06:42:25 UTC
I did not use to believe in global warming until it was in the 70s in the winter and was snowing in April the past few years (I live in Indiana). I don't know if "global warming" is the term to use, however, it is undeniable that our environment is changing in ways that it never has before....the other thing that we need to consider (but often forget) is the 2nd law of thermodynamics- everything moves towards a state of entropy and it can not decrease only increase (I know a very scientific definition that I am sure someone will disagree with). However, it is proposterous for us to assume that the energy that we consume and but back out into society will not have an effect on it (for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction) Therefore, when we introduce massive amounts of toxins and unnatural substnaces/emissions/products into our environment- there will be a reaction from that- mainly one that goes towards disorder....call it global warming or whatever you will, but it is happening and although it probably cannot be stopped, we can do things to delay the decay and negative changes that are happening



now do politics take advanage of the situation...well they take advantage of every situation to the fullest exstint possible, so that is just a crazy question, however, just b/c politics takes something and blows it out of proportion does not mean that it is not real or that it is not important...



lastly, I think concern over global warming the degradtion of earth is proportional to your religious views on what you think is going to happen to earth...if you are a christian then you should not be too worried b/c you know that it is supposed to happen, but just dread the day that it gets to its worst spot :)
nickv2304
2007-06-07 04:34:18 UTC
I agree that politicians are using global warming as a means of generating tax revenue and that there are other contributory factors to global warming. However, human intervention is significantly contributing to global warming and (regardless of those other factors) we should make changes in the areas we do control. The fact that some politicians are behaving like weasels and some enviromentalists have become nazis (with a small n) does not change the evidence that is clearly there , however opportunistic and irritating they are.
mrearly2
2007-06-04 06:08:58 UTC
Sure. Let's say the Globe is Warming.

The real problem for us, is when certain people with an agenda, attempt to place the cause of a Warming Globe, on Man (yes, that includes women and children). Most scientists believe that man is NOT the cause of "Global Warming". Man's contribution to "greenhouse gases" is very small, in fact.

The big plan is to get the politicians involved so that legislation is passed, that will enrich certain corporations, but cause problems and big expense for the "little people"--that's most of us.
Trevor
2007-06-04 06:13:19 UTC
If you don't know anyone who beleives it then all I can say is that you don't know many people. You mention 'pounds' in your question so I assume you're in the UK - 91% of the population view climate change as a serious threat - http://www.worldpublicopinion.org/pipa/articles/btenvironmentra/187.php?nid=&id=&pnt=187&lb=bte



No UN report has ever stated that livestock contribute more CO2 then transport - please include a link. Livestock produce methane and the quantity is small compared to CO2 from transport.



Which taxes have been increased or introduced because of global warming? Again, please provide a link. There are some penalties imposed on the worst polluters but conversely there are benefits for the least polluters. Cut your emissions and you save money.



It's quite clear that you haven't studied global warming otherwise you'd know something about it.
Metella
2007-06-04 06:16:44 UTC
well, yes I do believe it - but just saying global warming doesn't address that I feel it is happening - but human activity is accelerating it greatly and changing the patterns of what would be a "normal" warming. The patterns may change so much that we will never have a comfortable planet again.



How is "global warming" or more precisely - acting to slow it down - going to affect your pocket book??? REALLY, come on, all you have to do is put out two bins at the curb to recycle. Baby.
funkayfish
2007-06-04 10:59:10 UTC
Well, lets start off by saying that yes global warming is happening, however, as part of earths natural cycle and, humans are contributing to it, as humans do, though i do not believe specifically that humans are the cause or saviors of the problem, it will right itself with time, in fact to quote my history teacher's words, it was in fact 4 degrees warmer during that middle ages as opposed to now.



The only thing that gets my goat with global warming (as well as the mass publication and belief of the many people going with the flow instead of questioning it, people who believe everything the government says, i'm not attacking the government right now, just the people who suck up to them or "stick with the in crowd") is the fact that in schools, it is being taught, as part of the curriculum that humans play a major part in global warming and is also going on about many things which are partly related as fact, not that global warming could, and i believe is, a part of the earths natural cycle.



i agree that global warming is not helped by humans and i also agree that we have taken much from that earth and i agree it wouldn't hurt to keep it a little cleaner, in a manner of speaking, but i think global warming has been blown out of proportion by a huge number of people and government officials in the richer countries (have you ever heard of the third world campaigning against global warming?), instead of spending, time, money (both pink floyd songs) and effort in it, when they should, in fact care about different problems, it above me to say which are more important, but i do believe that money could be better distributed!!!
?
2007-06-04 06:14:41 UTC
Yes I believe. We definitely play a role in it as well. The livestock that you refer to is bred just to feed us so not too indirectly that is a contribution of CO2 made on the behalf of humans.



Anyway, even if you don't believe in global warming, is there any good reason to oppose keeping the environment clean?
Bushllit
2007-06-04 06:12:07 UTC
Clearly you don't believe it and I wouldn't waste my time trying to convince you otherwise. I know that climate change is a very real problem facing us.

Unfortunately I saw "An inconvenient truth" and I almost feel like it's not a problem anymore, but that's just because I can't stand that unadulterated american crap. He generalises far too much and claims climate change is responsible for all our problems, these claims do not in my opinion hold much scientific weight.

Believe or not my friend climate change will seriously affect your life, or maybe you'll get lucky and be dead by then in which case it'll just affect your kids.
2007-06-05 12:46:58 UTC
I find this rather interesting.



We put out 30,000,000,000 tons of CO2 in the atmosphere every year.



To put that in perspective, that's 38 molecules of CO2 for every 100,000 molecules of air. It would take 5 years to change that 38 molecules to 39 molecules at the above rate.



Interesting, huh?
Mrs. Eric Cartman
2007-06-04 07:11:25 UTC
I don't right now, but the mind's always open on this issue. If they find more evidence, I'll start worrying. But yeah, I totally agree with you and it irritates me when people treat something that hasn't been proven as fact. The theory would inhibit businesses and help a certain political party. That's why it's popular.
Redhead
2007-06-04 06:06:36 UTC
Human beings are destroying hte planet - that much is certain. Look at all the waste we are pumping in to the atmosphere and all the resources we are taking out of it. Whether it is an bad as we are led to believe is another thing. The earth has gone through periods of extreme heat and cold for millions of years and this could be one of them but the human race are certainly not helping matters at all.



I honestly think that scientists and politicans cannot be certain why temperatures are rising as they are but it would not hurt to do whatever you can to reduce the damage we are doing to our one and only planet.
2007-06-06 21:00:54 UTC
Even if it is real, the government is using it as an excuse to tax us.



If they don't stop taxing us we will find undectectable and untaxable methods of increasing our emmissions purely out of spite.
Hey!
2007-06-04 06:06:17 UTC
I'm still trying to figure out what happened to global cooling. It was all the rage in the 70's.
fred
2007-06-04 06:18:34 UTC
It doen't matter if no-one wants to believe in global warming.



it is not a religion, it is evidenced, experienced, peer-reviewed and well documented. It will happen regardless.



I will believe baby jesus above (as on this board, not in the pulpits of big-mouthed religion who think that shouting loudest makes them right)
2007-06-04 06:03:08 UTC
So why are the ice caps shrinking? Why is the polar bear population under threat? What does Greenpeace say about it? Do some basic research (not from government sites) and you'll find global warming IS happening, it IS assisted by human activity, and if we don't do anything real soon, we won't have a world to argue over. How much more evidence do we need?
Treblacram
2007-06-04 06:05:48 UTC
Maybe not global warming, but something is happening. The four major hurricanes in one year not too long is a sign that thing's are a changin'!
John Galt
2007-06-04 07:08:51 UTC
These sheep will beleive anything. Specially if algore makes a movie about it. And if you question global warming they will go after you personally and not respond with ideas or data. These causes for GW are all THEORY not one has been proven. The truth is we don't know what is causing it, but these sheep will attack you personally for dissenting. The argue like good little communist, attack personally.
Anders
2007-06-04 06:10:26 UTC
*Global Warming - Does anyone actually Not believe in it anymore?



mrearly2, post some sort of evidence of what you are saying, a source for instance. Of course you won't since you have no such evidence.
RedPixels
2007-06-04 06:06:57 UTC
I never thought I'd say this, but as a scientist and as an intelligent, learned individual who KNOWS how to tell facts from crap, I agree with Baby Jesus.
2007-06-04 06:01:20 UTC
If you mean man being responsible for global warming? No, absolutely not. There is no doubt however a warming going on. Over time it will be followed by a cooling, which in turn will be followed by yet another warming and so on. There is nothing to panic about. The world as we know it will not end. We are not all going to perish as a result of this warming trend. Just about everything we understand to date has a pattern. This wave pattern occurs often in nature, including ocean waves, sound waves, and light waves.All of these can be graphed or illustrated with a sine wave, and as a result can then be monitored and analyzed. In the case of global temperature we just don't have enough accurate data yet to ''plot'' a pattern which would help us predict coming changes. Don't forget, the only accurate recorded data we have dates back only about 100 years, everything else is just theories and guesswork. So you see, it's just a natural cycle. In fact, if we could and did change global warming we may in fact do greater damage to the Earth's future as this current warming may be vital to it's ecosystem!
Yay me!!!!
2007-06-04 11:21:21 UTC
Honey, people like you need to wake up and smell th smog. Of course it exists!!!
LillyB
2007-06-04 06:06:28 UTC
What a load of bollocks - the evidence for climate change is all around us. And why do you think we have so much livestock? If there were no people there would not be great herds of cows and sheep everywhere. Wake up and seek out accurate information.
2007-06-04 05:59:26 UTC
I did then read many papers on it and did my own delving and now i don`t believe we as humans are responsible but the fact that our climate is changing and always has is undeniable
Justin L
2007-06-04 07:17:06 UTC
Yes. There is nothing to not believe, but instead an indecision to act or not.
2007-06-04 06:05:20 UTC
Why can't I give Lance half a thumbs up, man is adding to it but he is correct that it is a natural occurring phenomenon
ikerro
2007-06-04 06:16:27 UTC
Believe in it or believe in it not



It's happening and there's no stopping it
Jim B
2007-06-04 07:44:36 UTC
I guess all of the Phd.'s at NASA are wrong...right? The debate is over.
Amber
2007-06-04 06:07:34 UTC
Of course I "believe in it"! And you should too.
MrOrph
2007-06-04 06:00:43 UTC
Unfortuately it's not gowing away.



But, frankly, I am sick of it. With all of the proof AGAINST the supposed science indicating that WE are to blame being ingnored, I have to ask, how can we believe this is real?



Yeah, maybe the globe IS warming, but is has before, many times, and this time won't be the last.



Chicken Little, please go home!
2007-06-05 13:26:14 UTC
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_warming
jj
2007-06-04 06:28:48 UTC
what color is the sky in your world?

does it have stars made of fruit loops that you can just pluck from the night sky and munch on them while you stroll down sidewalks made of laffy-taffy?
apreston60
2007-06-04 19:47:39 UTC
Yes I believe so !!!
Jack
2007-06-04 06:47:31 UTC
NO! Its a con. It is a natural event.
2007-06-04 05:58:40 UTC
Er yes, I believe it. Why else would olive trees be flourishing the UK now when they couldn't 20 years ago?
2007-06-04 06:00:23 UTC
its democratic propaganda, and global warming can wait, a war on Muslim extremists takes highest priority.



Al Gore and the rest of the liberal power dwellers are hypocrites
2007-06-04 17:07:07 UTC
i do.
RichSTCharles
2007-06-06 21:57:01 UTC
What is this? The Ann Coulter Comedy Hour. AGAIN READ THIS. Plus, Don't you think that it is Odd with the weather disasters we have had for the last 5 years or so?









* What causes global warming?

* Is the earth really getting hotter?

* Are warmer temperatures causing bad things to happen?

* Is global warming making hurricanes worse?

* Is there really cause for serious concern?

* Could global warming trigger a sudden catastrophe?

* What country is the largest source of global warming pollution?

* How can we cut global warming pollution?

* Why aren't these technologies more commonplace now?

* Do we need new laws requiring industry to cut emissions of global warming pollution?

* Is it possible to cut power plant pollution and still have enough electricity?

* How can we cut car pollution?

* What can I do to help fight global warming?







What causes global warming?

Carbon dioxide and other air pollution that is collecting in the atmosphere like a thickening blanket, trapping the sun's heat and causing the planet to warm up. Coal-burning power plants are the largest U.S. source of carbon dioxide pollution -- they produce 2.5 billion tons every year. Automobiles, the second largest source, create nearly 1.5 billion tons of CO2 annually.



Here's the good news: technologies exist today to make cars that run cleaner and burn less gas, modernize power plants and generate electricity from nonpolluting sources, and cut our electricity use through energy efficiency. The challenge is to be sure these solutions are put to use.



Is the earth really getting hotter?

Yes. Although local temperatures fluctuate naturally, over the past 50 years the average global temperature has increased at the fastest rate in recorded history. And experts think the trend is accelerating: the 10 hottest years on record have all occurred since 1990. Scientists say that unless we curb global warming emissions, average U.S. temperatures could be 3 to 9 degrees higher by the end of the century.



Are warmer temperatures causing bad things to happen?

Global warming is already causing damage in many parts of the United States. In 2002, Colorado, Arizona and Oregon endured their worst wildfire seasons ever. The same year, drought created severe dust storms in Montana, Colorado and Kansas, and floods caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damage in Texas, Montana and North Dakota. Since the early 1950s, snow accumulation has declined 60 percent and winter seasons have shortened in some areas of the Cascade Range in Oregon and Washington.



Of course, the impacts of global warming are not limited to the United States. In 2003, extreme heat waves caused more than 20,000 deaths in Europe and more than 1,500 deaths in India. And in what scientists regard as an alarming sign of events to come, the area of the Arctic's perennial polar ice cap is declining at the rate of 9 percent per decade.



Is global warming making hurricanes worse?

Global warming doesn't create hurricanes, but it does make them stronger and more dangerous. Because the ocean is getting warmer, tropical storms can pick up more energy and become more powerful. So global warming could turn, say, a category 3 storm into a much more dangerous category 4 storm. In fact, scientists have found that the destructive potential of hurricanes has greatly increased along with ocean temperature over the past 35 years.



Is there really cause for serious concern?

Yes. Global warming is a complex phenomenon, and its full-scale impacts are hard to predict far in advance. But each year scientists learn more about how global warming is affecting the planet, and many agree that certain consequences are likely to occur if current trends continue. Among these:



* Melting glaciers, early snowmelt and severe droughts will cause more dramatic water shortages in the American West.



* Rising sea levels will lead to coastal flooding on the Eastern seaboard, in Florida, and in other areas, such as the Gulf of Mexico.



* Warmer sea surface temperatures will fuel more intense hurricanes in the southeastern Atlantic and Gulf coasts.



* Forests, farms and cities will face troublesome new pests and more mosquito-borne diseases.



* Disruption of habitats such as coral reefs and alpine meadows could drive many plant and animal species to extinction.



Could global warming trigger a sudden catastrophe?

Recently, researchers -- and even the U.S. Defense Department -- have investigated the possibility of abrupt climate change, in which gradual global warming triggers a sudden shift in the earth's climate, causing parts of the world to dramatically heat up or cool down in the span of a few years.



In February 2004, consultants to the Pentagon released a report laying out the possible impacts of abrupt climate change on national security. In a worst-case scenario, the study concluded, global warming could make large areas of the world uninhabitable and cause massive food and water shortages, sparking widespread migrations and war.



While this prospect remains highly speculative, many of global warming's effects are already being observed -- and felt. And the idea that such extreme change is possible underscores the urgent need to start cutting global warming pollution.



What country is the largest source of global warming pollution?

The United States. Though Americans make up just 4 percent of the world's population, we produce 25 percent of the carbon dioxide pollution from fossil-fuel burning -- by far the largest share of any country. In fact, the United States emits more carbon dioxide than China, India and Japan, combined. Clearly America ought to take a leadership role in solving the problem. And as the world's top developer of new technologies, we are well positioned to do so -- we already have the know-how.



How can we cut global warming pollution?

It's simple: By reducing pollution from vehicles and power plants. Right away, we should put existing technologies for building cleaner cars and more modern electricity generators into widespread use. We can increase our reliance on renewable energy sources such as wind, sun and geothermal. And we can manufacture more efficient appliances and conserve energy.



Why aren't these technologies more commonplace now?

Because, while the technologies exist, the corporate and political will to put them into widespread use does not. Many companies in the automobile and energy industries put pressure on the White House and Congress to halt or delay new laws or regulations -- or even to stop enforcing existing rules -- that would drive such changes. From requiring catalytic converters to improving gas mileage, car companies have fought even the smallest measure to protect public health and the environment. If progress is to be made, the American people will have to demand it.



Do we need new laws requiring industry to cut emissions of global warming pollution?

Yes. The Bush administration has supported only voluntary reduction programs, but these have failed to stop the growth of emissions. Even leaders of major corporations, including companies such as DuPont, Alcoa and General Electric, agree that it�s time for the federal government to create strong laws to cut global warming pollution. Public and political support for solutions has never been stronger. Congress is now considering fresh proposals to cap emissions of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping pollutants from America's largest sources -- power plants, industrial facilities and transportation fuels.



Stricter efficiency requirements for electric appliances will also help reduce pollution. One example is the 30 percent tighter standard now in place for home central air conditioners and heat pumps, a Clinton-era achievement that will prevent the emission of 51 million metric tons of carbon -- the equivalent of taking 34 million cars off the road for one year. The new rule survived a Bush administration effort to weaken it when, in January 2004, a federal court sided with an NRDC-led coalition and reversed the administration's rollback.



Is it possible to cut power plant pollution and still have enough electricity?

Yes. First, we must use more efficient appliances and equipment in our homes and offices to reduce our electricity needs. We can also phase out the decades-old, coal-burning power plants that generate most of our electricity and replace them with cleaner plants. And we can increase our use of renewable energy sources such as wind and sun. Some states are moving in this direction: California has required its largest utilities to get 20 percent of their electricity from renewable sources by 2017, and New York has pledged to compel power companies to provide 25 percent of the state's electricity from renewable sources by 2013.



How can we cut car pollution?

Cost-effective technologies to reduce global warming pollution from cars and light trucks of all sizes are available now. There is no reason to wait and hope that hydrogen fuel cell vehicles will solve the problem in the future. Hybrid gas-electric engines can cut global warming pollution by one-third or more today; hybrid sedans, SUVs and trucks from several automakers are already on the market.



But automakers should be doing a lot more: They've used a legal loophole to make SUVs far less fuel efficient than they could be; the popularity of these vehicles has generated a 20 percent increase in transportation-related carbon dioxide pollution since the early 1990s. Closing this loophole and requiring SUVs, minivans and pick-up trucks to be as efficient as cars would cut 120 million tons of carbon dioxide pollution a year by 2010. If automakers used the technology they have right now to raise fuel economy standards for new cars and light trucks to a combined 40 m.p.g., carbon dioxide pollution would eventually drop by more than 650 million tons per year as these vehicles replaced older models.



For more information on hybrid vehicles, see NRDC's hybrid guide.



What can I do to help fight global warming?

There are many simple steps you can take right now to cut global warming pollution. Make conserving energy a part of your daily routine. Each time you choose a compact fluorescent light bulb over an incandescent bulb, for example, you'll lower your energy bill and keep nearly 700 pounds of carbon dioxide out of the air over the bulb's lifetime. By opting for a refrigerator with the Energy Star label -- indicating it uses at least 15 percent less energy than the federal requirement -- over a less energy-efficient model, you can reduce carbon dioxide pollution by nearly a ton in total. Join NRDC in our campaign against global warming.
baby jesus
2007-06-04 05:58:30 UTC
you are dangerously stupid


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