Not exact matches
He seemed to hit his stride from 2008
through 2010, when those fighting efforts to cut greenhouse gas
emissions were buoyed by email hacks, the Great Recession, the breakdown of climate talks in Copenhagen and a stutter - step in the global warming
trend.
«At present, governments» attempts to limit greenhouse - gas
emissions through carbon cap - and - trade schemes and to promote renewable and sustainable energy sources are prob ¬ ably too late to arrest the inevitable
trend of global warming,» the scientists write in a paper published online in the scientific journal, Nature Climate Change, on Monday, 14 October 2012.
The
trend will not improve if over-allocation of
emission allowances
through weak National Allocation Plans seen in the period 2005 - 2007 continues.
Operational
emissions are on an improving
trend as the miners come
through their recent cost cutting exercise — 9 of 12 companies have taken steps to reduce the
emissions intensity of operations.
As a satellite drifts
through new LECTs, it consequently samples the
emissions from the earth at changing local times, in effect allowing local diurnal cycle variations to appear in the time series as spurious
trends.
She was in town this past week to speak at the 11th annual New York Fashion Conference and I stopped by Edelman's offices to speak with her about sustainable fashion, consumer
trends towards reuse, eBay's carbon
emission reduction goal, upcoming announcements in 2010, and more — click
through for our discussion: TreeHugger: The Re + Purpose campaign just wrapped up, where the Green Team collaborated with green blogs to encourage consumers to find new value in existing products, what can we expect in 2010?
This «overall warming
trend» started long before there were any human CO2
emissions to speak of (as we have been emerging from the Little Ice Age) and has continued
through the most recent warming.
Data recently submitted by the U.S. to the United Nations (U.N.) Climate Secretariat and reported in the media show that this
trend continued
through 2004, when U.S. greenhouse
emissions reached a record high of 7.07 billion tons.