Sentences with phrase «aggressive mitigation from»

Not exact matches

The advance package, another $ 3,000, adds stop - and - go adaptive cruise control with low - speed following (creeping along in traffic jams), collision mitigation braking with even more pedestrian detection, and road departure warning, which is a more aggressive, pull - me - back - from - the - abyss enhancement to lane departure warning.
The influencing of policy in re global warming faces a huge amount of inertia, but principles of risk mitigation tell us that we should be aggressive about shifting policy to avert possible threats, the opposite of what results from that inertia.
At our suggestion Ed carried out some more work on his initial calculations and sourced figures from CDIAC which gave a somewhat higher figure than the ones he originally used in the communication above and which consequently altered the temperature reductions that could be achieved through aggressive mitigation and which are detailed in Ed's article below.
Anyone considering aggressive carbon mitigation policies — such as National Governments acting on the advice received from the UNFCCC / IPCC — that will have a huge and fundamental impact on their citizens lives would reasonably be expected to read the evidence and ask themselves a number of questions before embarking on a course of action - such as the following;
But with carbon still accumulating in the atmosphere and with Trump and other politicians around the world seeking to slow or sabotage a transition away from fossil fuels, then it goes to follow that enacting such an aggressive mitigation will be very difficult to manage without an overwhelming resistance to such harmful policy stances.
If very aggressive mitigation scenarios can be implemented from today onwards, they may be sufficient to achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement.
• Even greater risks to human rights than the risks posed by aggressive mitigation action arise from the profound impacts of climate change, especially if temperature increase exceeds 2 °C, which becomes increasingly likely if mitigation is delayed.
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