Helping The Planet One Step A Time

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Global Warming…Its Happening June 11, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — zeeeko @ 5:18 am

When we wake up in the morning, sometimes we now that it’s going to be raining that day, or sunny, or even snowing which means no school…hopefully. Climate is the average weather over many years. It changes gradually, and lasts for a long time like during the four seasons. Many, many, many years, we’ll say millions of years ago many of the earth’s land was under ice, for example a “few thousand years ago UK was under ice,” EPA scientists say. Earth has warmed up really fast, and still is. This is called Global Warming.

How is the Earth’s climate changed?

How is earth warmed up…obviously from the sun, our number one resource for energy and light. But many things block the heat from being released such as the greenhouse gases. These greenhouse gases are Carbon Dioxide, Nitrous Oxide, Methane, and Water Vapor. The image beside shows how that works…but it mostly works like a regular greenhouse works. That’s why they call it the greenhouse effect. From all these greenhouse gases…it warms up the earth…maybe in the future too hot for us to survive.

Greenhouse Gases

  • Carbon dioxide comes from many natural sources such as volcanoes, soils, oceans, and living things. Plants soak up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as they grow and the ocean acts like a sink for carbon dioxide to be stored in. Carbon dioxide is a key greenhouse gas because it is common and increasing because of human activity such as cars to other engines that makes life easier for the humans.
  • Nitrous oxide comes from soils, oceans and burning wood and fossil fuels. Its greenhouse effect is 320 times greater than carbon dioxide, but it is rare in the atmosphere.
  • Water vapour is the most common and strongest greenhouse gas. Lots, lots of water evaporates from the oceans, mostly closer to the equator since its hotter there.
  • Methane is formed when things rot without oxygen. It has 25 times more greenhouse effect than carbon dioxide, and its also rare in the atmosphere.

Many of our activities make greenhouse gases.

  • Burning Fossil Fuel

Fossil fuels (coal, gas & oil) are the remains of organisms that have been buried since the dinosaurs walked the Earth. We burn fossil fuel in power stations and to heat our houses. Burning fossil fuels releases carbon that has been trapped for millions of years and adds carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide levels have increased by 25% since the industrial revolution.

  • Driving Cars

Petrol is a fossil fuel, so we add carbon dioxide to the atmosphere by burning it. Car exhausts also contain many other polluting chemicals.

  • Deforestation

Huge areas of forest are being cut down all over the world. When trees are burnt, the carbon that they locked away is released as carbon dioxide.

  • Landfill sites

When we throw food and garden waste into our rubbish bins, it gets buried in landfill sites. As it rots under piles of other rubbish, it creates methane.

  • CFCs For Fridges and Aerosols

CFC stands for chlorofluoro-carbon. CFCs do not exist naturally. Wemake them using industrial processes. They are used for coolants in fridges andpropellants in aerosols. There are only tiny amounts in the atmosphere (less than 0.000001%), but they have around 10,000 times the ‘greenhouse effect’ of carbon dioxide. CFCs also destroy ozone – an important part of the upper atmosphere. Some ozone friendly CFCs are still greenhouse gases.

  • Farming

When farmers add nitrogen fertiliser to the soil, some of it is turned into nitrous oxide, a powerful greenhouse gas. Cows produce methane when grass ferments in their stomach. There are an estimated 1.2 billion cattle in the world, all adding to the world’s greenhouse gases.

Sources

Image-http://www.effectofglobalwarming.com/images/What-is-global-warming-img.jpg

http://www.funnyandjokes.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/06/shark-global-warming.jpg

EPA Climate Change

Climate Change Vs. Global Warming

 

…Eco-City June 11, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — zeeeko @ 4:23 am

This blog is part two of the image blog where I talked briefly about an Eco-city. An Eco-city has great importance to the environment, for the people that live in that area, and all the living species that live within and around it. The Eco-city that I previously talked about was Dongtan and that Eco-city was designed by Alejandro Gutierrez and he went onto designing the Eco-city because it was located near the Yangtze River in Shanghai that rare birds use as migratory path. So an Eco-city is important for us to consider and pursue in.

An eco-city is like “an ecologically healthy city,” Eco-City Naturalist explains,”Today’s cities are making life systems on the planet-the ecology of the planet-very sick.” Then they go on making a point that the atmosphere and the ocean have a fever…heating up from the global warming. We are killing off animals all around the world all because of expansion of industries, companies, and cities. How, from polluting, taking over their habitat, and so on.

Eco-City is what people are doing now because they realize that we have been wrong and doing the wrong thing from the emissions of carbon dioxide from cars to allowing companies dump their waste in rivers-we can enforce regulations of the environment better if we tried. But we don’t!


Buildings

Its buildings make best use of sun, wind, and rainfall to help supply the energy and water needs of occupants. Generally multistory to maximize the land available for green space.

Biodiversity

It is threaded with natural habitat corridors, to foster biodiversity and to give residents access to nature for recreation.

Transport

Its food and other goods are sourced from within its borders or from nearby, in order to cut down on transport costs. The majority of its residents live within walking or cycling distance of their workplace, to minimize the need for motorized transport. Frequent public transport connects local centers for people who need to travel further. Local car sharing allows people to use a car only when needed.

Industry

The goods it produces are designed for reuse, re-manufacture, and recycling. The industrial processes its uses involve reuse of by products, and minimize the movement of goods.

Energy

It reduces energy consumption through conservation, produces energy locally and sustainably through installation of renewable energy technology, and converts existing uses of fossil-fuel energy to renewable energy.

Economy

It has a labor intensive rather than a material, energy, and water intensive economy, to maintain full employment and minimize material throughput.

Emerging Threats

It will make development and land use decisions that prepare for climate change-related flooding, drought, disease, and other impacts from severe weather events, conserve energy and achieve carbon-neutrality, identify ways to reduce/eliminate nutrient loading to waterways, and conduct accurate and continual assessments of resource and infrastructure capacity when planning to ensure growth and development does not exceed capacity.

Sources

Image-http://www.arch.nus.edu.sg/staff_a/big.jpg

http://architecture.myninjaplease.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/05/foster_masdar_1.jpg

Eco-City Naturally Better Living

Eco-City Charter 2008