Sentences with phrase «so mitigation efforts»

And so mitigation efforts become more valuable — more worthwhile — because they can prevent these costs.
And so mitigation efforts become more valuable — more worthwhile — because they can prevent these costs,» said Hausman, who is co-author of the study that appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Not exact matches

The study also showed that U.S. mitigation efforts reduced cetacean deaths by about two - thirds between 1990 and 1999, «so we have some effective solutions to share with other countries,» Read says.
The thinking behind offering mortgage write - downs make sense when so many homes are worth less than the mortgage amounts against them, but the complex nature of the secondary mortgage market and its rules can sink well - meaning loss mitigation efforts.
The domestic mitigation effort is defined so as to match the rapid decline needed to put the EU on course toward 90 % reductions relative to 1990 levels by 2050, consistent with the emission trajectory for Annex I countries presented in Figure 3 above.
People have strong interests in the welfare of their society, so deniers may act in ways supporting mitigation efforts where they believe these efforts will have positive societal effects.
It is assumed that they use international support to undertake mitigation in excess of their own fair shares of the global mitigation effort, and by so doing exploit their full national mitigation potentials.
That's how mitigation policy was born and incubated so talking about adaptation doesn't do justice for the decades of expert power seeking and manipulation associated to AGW and statist efforts.
If so, this is an important consideration in determining how much finance rich countries should provide to poorer countries to help with their mitigation efforts.
I don't think that scientific knowledge is the limiting factor in mitigation efforts though, so whether this carbon footprint is paid off climatologically speaking is not immediately evident (at least not the in the short term).
It's a global model so it doesn't tell us anything about climate equity or the distribution of mitigation efforts, wealth or improved lifestyles.
If we agreed on points like this, we really don't need to spend so much time and effort focusing on regulation, carbon pricing, emission targets and time tables and high cost mitigation policies that have low probability of achieving their aims.
The vast majority of climate justice oriented civil society groups support public finance for mitigation, adaptation, and loss and damage efforts so it is worrisome that the Marry Robinson Foundation is asking YOUNGO to sign a letter that leaves those important points out.
In Part 1 of this series, we discussed that even so, the key objective of climate mitigation efforts is still the same — we must drastically cut emissions as quickly as possible (and Part 2 and Part 3 discussed how).
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