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Global Warming 9th STD Project.

The document discusses global warming and its causes. It explains that global warming is a gradual increase in the Earth's temperatures caused by greenhouse gas emissions from human activities like burning fossil fuels and deforestation. These activities increase greenhouse gases in the atmosphere like carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, trapping more heat and leading to changes in the climate over time like rising sea levels and more extreme weather. The document also discusses the greenhouse effect and how certain gases in the atmosphere act like a blanket trapping heat. Deforestation contributes to global warming by removing trees that absorb carbon dioxide and reducing the forest's ability to regulate temperatures and water cycles. Individual actions to reduce energy consumption from fossil fuels and shift to renewable energy can help

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Pradyun DS
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
3K views35 pages

Global Warming 9th STD Project.

The document discusses global warming and its causes. It explains that global warming is a gradual increase in the Earth's temperatures caused by greenhouse gas emissions from human activities like burning fossil fuels and deforestation. These activities increase greenhouse gases in the atmosphere like carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, trapping more heat and leading to changes in the climate over time like rising sea levels and more extreme weather. The document also discusses the greenhouse effect and how certain gases in the atmosphere act like a blanket trapping heat. Deforestation contributes to global warming by removing trees that absorb carbon dioxide and reducing the forest's ability to regulate temperatures and water cycles. Individual actions to reduce energy consumption from fossil fuels and shift to renewable energy can help

Uploaded by

Pradyun DS
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 35

Global Warming

Project

1 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Introduction:-

From The Stone Age to the modern era man has


come a long way . In his pursuit of comforts of life he
ignored the threat of pollution and environmental
degradation caused by industrialization.

Global warming is not new as this process occurs


naturally and keeps the Earth’s temperature about 50
degrees Fahrenheit warmer than it would be
otherwise, without this natural cover, Earth’s surface
would be colder than it is today, making the planet
freezing and devoid of life.

2 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


What is Global warming?

3 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


What is Global warming?
What does it mean?

Global warming is the term used to


describe a gradual increase in the
average temperature of the Earth's
atmosphere and its oceans, a
change that is believed to be
permanently changing the Earth’s
climate.

4 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Cont.

There is great debate among many


people, and sometimes in the news,
on whether global warming is real
(some call it a hoax). But climate
scientists looking at the data and
facts agree the planet is warming.

5 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Cont.

While many view the effects of


global warming to be more
substantial and more rapidly
occurring than others do, the
scientific consensus on climatic
changes related to global warming is
that the average temperature of the
Earth has risen between 0.4 and 0.8
°C over the past 100 years.

6 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Cont.

The increased volumes of carbon


dioxide and other greenhouse gases
released by the burning of fossil fuels,
land clearing, agriculture, and other
human activities, are believed to be
the primary sources of the global
warming that has occurred over the
past 50 years.

7 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Cont.

Scientists from the Intergovernmental


Panel on Climate carrying out global
warming research have recently
predicted that average global
temperatures could increase
between 1.4 and 5.8 °C by the year
2100.

8 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


What is Global warming?
What does it mean?

Changes resulting from global


warming may include rising sea levels
due to the melting of the polar ice
caps, as well as an increase in
occurrence and severity of storms
and other severe weather events.

9 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


What causes the
Earth’s climate to
change?

10 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


3.Greenhouse Effect

11 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


What is Greenhouse effect?
What does it mean?

The Greenhouse Effect is the


process by which radiation, from
a planet's atmosphere, warms the
planet's surface to a temperature
above what it would be without its
atmosphere.

12 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Examples:-

Carbon Dioxide
(CO2)
Ozone (O3) Nitrous Oxide
(N2O)

And Etc..
Methane
(CH4)

13 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


2.Deforestation

14 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


What is Deforestation?
What does it mean?

It is activity of cutting out


trees in the forests in with
the purpose of
development of that What is
particular place , resourcing
the raw material to process Deforestation?
goods like papers.

15 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Cont.

Massive Deforestation could lead to


less Carbon Dioxide (CO2)[being
absorbed for Photosynthesis process]
and causing much more of the
greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

16 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


How does it look when a Forest is
completely destroyed?

17 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


How it looks when a Forest is completely destroyed?

18 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


What is the effect of
deforestation?
19 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius
Effects of Deforestation

Deforestation can have a


negative impact on the
environment. The most
dramatic impact is a loss of
habitat for millions of species.
Eighty percent of Earth’s land
animals and plants live in
forest, and many cannot
survive the deforestation that
destroys their homes.

20 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Cont.
Deforestation also drives
climate change. Forest soils
are moist, but without
protection from sun-blocking
tree cover, they quickly dry
out. Trees also help
perpetuate the water cycle
by returning water vapour to
the atmosphere. Without trees
to fill these roles, many former
forest lands can quickly
become barren deserts.
21 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius
Cont.

Removing trees deprives the


forest of portions of its canopy,
which blocks the sun’s rays
during the day, and holds in
heat at night. This disruption
leads to more extreme
temperature swings that can
be harmful to plants and
animals.

22 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Cont.

Trees also play a critical role in


absorbing the greenhouse
gases that fuel global
warming. Fewer forests means
larger amounts of greenhouse
gases entering the
atmosphere—and increased
speed and severity of global
warming.

23 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Cont.
The most feasible solution to
deforestation is to carefully
manage forest resources by
eliminating clear-cutting to make
sure forest environments remain
intact. The cutting that does
occur should be balanced by
planting young trees to replace
older trees felled. The number of
new tree plantations is growing
each year, but their total still
equals a tiny fraction of the
Earth’s forested land.
24 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius
So how can each of us
slow global warming
now?

25 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Reduce our consumption of fossil fuels

Because greenhouse gas


emissions are tied very closely
to our energy consumption,
using less fossil fuel based
energy puts fewer greenhouse
gases into the atmosphere.

This will help slow global


warming.

26 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Power your home with renewable energy.
Choose a utility company that
generates at least half its power
from wind or solar and has
been certified by Green-e
Energy, an organization that
vets renewable energy options.
If that isn’t possible for you, take
a look at your electric bill; many
utilities now list other ways to
support renewable sources on
their monthly statements and
websites.
27 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius
Reduce water waste
Saving water reduces carbon
pollution, too. That's because it takes
a lot of energy to pump, heat, and
treat your water. So take shorter
showers, turn off the tap while
brushing your teeth, and switch
to Water Sense - labelled fixtures
and appliances. The EPA estimates
that if just one out of every 100
American homes were retrofitted
with water-efficient fixtures, about
100 million kilowatt-hours of
electricity per year would be
saved—avoiding 80,000 tons of
global warming pollution.
28 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius
Buy better bulbs
LED light bulbs use up to
80 percent less energy
than
conventional incandesce
nt. They’re also cheaper
in the long run: A 10-watt
LED that replaces your
traditional 60-watt bulb
will save you $125 over
the light bulb's life.

29 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Drive a fuel-efficient vehicle
Gas-smart cars, such as hybrids and
fully electric vehicles, save fuel and
money. And once all cars and light
trucks meet 2025’s clean car
standards, which means averaging
54.5 miles per gallon, they’ll be a
mainstay. For good reason: Relative
to a national fleet of vehicles that
averaged only 28.3 miles per gallon
in 2011, Americans will spend $80
billion less at the pump each year
and cut their automotive emissions
by half. Before you buy a new set of
wheels, compare fuel-economy
performance here.
30 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius
SPEAK UP!!!!

What’s the single biggest way you can make an impact on global climate change? “Talk to your
friends and family, and make sure your representatives are making good decisions,” Haq says. By
voicing your concerns—via social media or, better yet, directly to your elected officials—you
send a message that you care about the warming world. Encourage Congress to enact new
laws that limit carbon emissions and require polluters to pay for the emissions they produce. “The
main reason elected officials do anything difficult is because their constituents make them,” Haq
says. You can help protect public lands, stop offshore drilling, and more here.
31 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius
Visions of a Zero-Carbon

F uT uRe

32 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius


Vision of a Zero-carbon FuTuRe
‘Visions of a zero-carbon future’ provides
suggestions of what the low-carbon world of
tomorrow might look like. Future homes and
offices may all utilise water- and energy-efficient
measures such as smart meters, solar panels, wind
turbines, and rainwater harvesting. Our cities of
the future could include more mixed-use
developments featuring high-quality urban design
and sustainable urban drainage systems. Transport
could be transformed by greater use of public
transport running on renewable energy sources.
Continental air travel could be replaced with
magnetically levitating trains travelling at 900km/h
using renewable sources of electricity. The
economy may be transformed by technological
solutions to both emission reductions and
adaptation to climate change, producing a
global developed society unrecognisable from
the present.
33 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius
1
CONCLUSION
34 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius
The ‘Conclusion’ confirms that global warming is the major challenge
for our global society. There is very little doubt that global warming will
change our climate in the next century. So what are the solutions to
global warming? First, there must be an international political solution.
Second, funding for developing cheap and clean energy production
must be increased, as all economic development is based on
increasing energy usage. We must not pin all our hopes on global
politics and clean energy technology, so we must prepare for the worst
and adapt. If implemented now, a lot of the costs and damage that
could be caused by changing climate can be mitigated.

35 Team Jöns Jacob Berzelius

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