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By the end of the century scientists are projecting an increase in global emissions from between 2.5. and 10.5 degrees. How do our CO2 emissions affect their predictions?
Professor Diane Sullivan interviews Dr. Paul R. Epstein of the Harvard Medical School, Nancy Cole of the Union of Concerned Scientists, and Kurt Olson Professor of Law at MSL on this episode of The Massachusetts School of Law's Educational Forum: Global Warming.
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We need to emit less co2 today!
cypress1337 1 year ago
I love watching people spout complete crap. The percentage of C02 human activity is responsible for is so minute that it hardly makes any difference on Global Warming. It's time Al Gore and the IPCC came clean
XMrAverageX 2 years ago
CO2 is a meager, miniscule paltry 0.038% of the earth's atmosphere. The more CO2, the more Plant Growth, the more Food per acre; the more Food per acre; the more robust habitats and ecosystemscosystems, the less dependence on water for growth. CO2 is quite succintly, the greatest airborne Planet Fertilizer.
Moreover, plants release CO2 at Night using the same mechanism as animals.
AnonymousWhitePerson 2 years ago