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Greenhouse gases

Greenhouse gases (GHGs) are gases in Earth's atmosphere that trap heat, causing a "greenhouse effect." They allow sunlight to enter the atmosphere but prev

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Greenhouse gases (GHGs) are gases in Earth's atmosphere that trap heat, causing a "greenhouse effect." They allow sunlight to enter the atmosphere but prevent some of the heat from escaping back into space, which leads to warming of the planet.

Major Greenhouse Gases:

  1. Carbon dioxide (CO₂): Released through burning fossil fuels (oil, gas, coal), deforestation, and some industrial processes.
  2. Methane (CH₄): Emitted during the production and transport of coal, oil, and natural gas. Also comes from livestock and other agricultural practices.
  3. Nitrous oxide (N₂O): Released from agricultural activities, waste management, and industrial processes.
  4. Fluorinated gases (CFCs, HFCs, PFCs, SF₆): Synthetic gases used in industry, typically in refrigeration, insulation, and aerosols. They are extremely potent GHGs.

Effect on the Environment:

  1. Global Warming: GHGs contribute to the warming of the Earth's atmosphere, raising global temperatures, which can lead to more extreme weather patterns like heatwaves, droughts, and stronger storms.
  2. Ice Melt and Sea-Level Rise: The warming leads to the melting of polar ice caps and glaciers, contributing to rising sea levels, which can flood coastal regions.
  3. Ocean Acidification: CO₂ dissolves in oceans, forming carbonic acid, which lowers the pH of seawater. This harms marine life, especially organisms with calcium carbonate shells or skeletons (like corals and shellfish).
  4. Ecosystem Disruption: Changes in temperature and precipitation patterns affect ecosystems, leading to shifts in species distributions, disruptions in food chains, and loss of biodiversity.

Mitigating Greenhouse Gas Emissions:

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See also

OvertourismBehavior gapThe PRISMA approachNEPPEBTERBERBFrugality