You will not be able to achieve the greenhouse gas emission reduction target
The British government will have to reduce air traffic traffic if it does not want to violate its own set of targets to reduce 60% of carbon dioxide emissions causing greenhouse effect by 2050.
(Photo: Labor) It is a warning of the Institute of Environmental Change Research under Oxford University - UK, after conducting environmental research.
According to the study, by 2050 alone, the amount of CO2 emitted from aircraft in the UK will increase by 4-10 times compared to the level of 1990, accounting for two-thirds of the total amount of emissions this country set for there. However, up to now, England has not only taken any measures to reduce the above emissions but continues to promote aviation development to double the number of passengers from 200 million to 470 million people / year in 2030.
If the UK does not limit the pace of aviation development, the country will not be able to meet its climate change commitments, Bren-Bo Bo-dmen of the university said. Currently, most scientists believe that the average temperature of Earth will increase from 2 to 6 degrees Celsius by the end of this century mainly due to greenhouse gases.
According to scientists, this is also the cause of the phenomenon of more and more plants and animals disappear. In addition, weather phenomena such as storms, droughts, floods or polar ice melts are also a threat to millions of other lives.
According to scientists, the Kyoto Protocol has so far been the only global agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but its ambitions are still very limited.
- The manufacturing industry has difficulty achieving the goal of reducing emissions
- Sea is the main pillar of sustainable economic development
- December 11, 1997 The Kyoto Protocol began to be signed by the UNFCCC
- ICAO establishes CO2 emission standards for aircraft
- Indonesia planted millions of hectares of forests to reduce emissions
- The grass may be the noodle Thach Sanh that absorbs CO2
- Reducing greenhouse gas emissions by silviculture
- Bad scenario in 2060
- The future of a deal in Cancun is still far away
- Global CO2 emissions in 2012 reached a record
- UN conference on climate change achieved modest results
- Can Tho actively responds to climate change