1990s Climate Change

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Pages: 6

Climate change is prevalent in today’s society and many people are trying to find ways to slow down the destruction that we as humans have done to our environments. Climate change was not a popular issue until about the 1990s even though the emission of greenhouse gases has always been dangerously high. In the online article by Daniel Bodansky it states “the development of climate change regime in the late 1980s and the early 1990s rode a wave of environmental activity, which began in 1987 with the discovery of the stratospheric “ozone hole”…”. By the time people started learning and understanding what climate change is, the question about whom or what is responsible for the major parts of global warming started getting asked. Can human activity be the main reason for the drastic increase in climate change?
From recent studies we can begin to understand the
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The planet has around seven billion people inhabiting it and every year the number of people increases. Because of the large amount of people living on this planet there is going to be a substantial amount of greenhouse gases that come with the necessity of living. Most people do not know that their everyday life activities are creating irreversible impacts on our climate, in an online website called Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) one scientist named Susan Solomon wrote an article about the irreversibility of climate change due to carbon dioxide emissions. Solomon states, “ Future carbon dioxide emissions in the 21st century will hence lead to the adverse climate changes on both a short term and a long term scale that would essentially be irreversible, where irreversible is defined here as a time exceeding the end of the millennium in the year 3000…” Solomon is stating here that even if we stop what we are doing to the environment now the impact that we have already made is so large that it is technically