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How Emissions Impact the Environment

How Emissions Impact the Environment

Our planet is being inexorably altered, day by day, and resulting changes in temperature and extreme weather is making our daily lives that much harder. The thing about it is, we have no one else to blame but ourselves. Droughts, heatwaves, wildfires, and intensified hurricanes have resulted in the loss of lives and property, not to mention the damage that’s being done to the remaining natural habitats all over the world.

When you think of carbon emissions, it’s very likely that you also think of the term greenhouse gases. These gases include carbon dioxide (naturally), methane, nitrous oxide, ozone, and water vapor. These gases escape and flow up into the atmosphere, where they trap the sun’s heat, thereby warming the average global temperature. This phenomenon, involving the long-term heating of Earth’s overall climate, is known as global warming.

Those emissions have been largely attributed to the burning of fossil fuels, such as coal, gasoline, or other petroleum products. As of 2017, carbon emissions comprised 82 percent of the total greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S.

What are some other greenhouse emissions?

According to the EIA, other common greenhouse gases include methane, which comes from coal mining, natural gas and petroleum systems, electricity generation, and transportation. Agricultural emissions, such as those from livestock, as well as waste management emissions are also huge sources of methane. Nitrous oxide is another common byproduct of fuel combustion and from fertilizer and animal waste management.

Humans; humans cause carbon emissions. While some animal farts may contribute to a high concentration of greenhouse gases, it’s the humans who put those animals together in the first place. Carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere daily by things like transportation, electricity production, agriculture, and any number of other industries that utilize fossil fuels. Transportation is the biggest culprit of all, accounting for 28.9 percent of all carbon emissions, according to the EPA.

Higher global temperatures don’t just mean a hotter world. These temperatures affect the sea level, the consistency of rain, the increased prevalence of drought, and the severity of tropical storms. Hurricanes have become stronger and more frequent, heatwaves and wildfires have raged out of control in some places, and droughts are more and more common in equatorial climates.

This means an increase in water use in crops, more need for lumber to replace damaged property, and a decrease in oxygen levels as entire swaths of forests are incinerated.

According to climate.gov, carbon dioxide concentrations are still on the rise. This is despite some indications that pollution levels had dropped at the start of the coronavirus pandemic. Unfortunately, the increase in industrialization across the world has necessitated a greater need for things like electricity and transportation.

Still, there is hope that research into more renewable energy resources like solar, wind, and geothermal power may be the key to repairing some of the damage. The mainstreaming of electric cars has also managed to take quite a few gas guzzlers off the road. Even so, there is work to be done.

How can we change things for the better?

Even if the world at large seems unwilling to do its part to make things better, there are things that you can do to reduce your own carbon footprint and carbon emissions. Drive less, eat less meat, use less electricity, and try your best to use as little waste as you can. Even if it seems hopeless, anything we do today can help save the Earth for tomorrow.

Source – Andrew Krosofsky, Green Matters  |  Image – pexels-pixabay-459728.jpg

Verde Environmental Consultants provide expert advisory, monitoring and assessment services from our offices in Wicklow, Cork, Mayo and Galway in soilairwaterwasteenergynoise and ecology disciplines

Our multidisciplinary approach and in-house expertise allows us to provide a breadth of relevant environmental consultancy and contracting services to both the private and public sectors. Our focus is on the delivery of relevant and quality advice to our clients that addresses their issues quickly in clear and plain language.

To ensure our results make business sense, our approach is to first understand our clients needs and then to provide practical and innovative advice that ensures environmental quality and makes a valued contribution to their business performance.

We are focussed on helping our EPA licenced clients to achieve compliance according to their licence conditions in the most economical way possible. We have a proven track record of successfully reducing many of our clients’ expenses in this area by securing reductions in monitoring requirements and by the easing of licence conditions where appropriate.

We currently represent a range of licenced companies from smaller Irish companies to large multinationals in the pharmaceutical, food, manufacturing, extraction and waste sectors.

Services of particular interest to the IE/IPC Sector include:

  • Perpetration of licence application, review/amendment, site plans and reports (AER, ELRA, CRAMP & Firewater).
  • Compliance Monitoring and Reporting (surface water, groundwater, noise etc).
  • Waste Classification and Reporting.
  • Environmental Management System and EHS implementation and support.
  • Risk Assessment, Contamination Management and Appropriate Assessment.
  • Troubleshooting and negotiation on your behalf with the Agency.
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