lunes, 2 de noviembre de 2009

We can stop climate change




Global average temperatures have risen 0.8 ° C since the beginning of the industrial revolution, a fact that may seem insignificant, but its consequences are desvatadoras. The polar icecaps are melting each year. Are occurring more and more extreme weather events.
Climate change is already harming ecosystems and threatening the livelihoods of millions.
It is not a threat from space. We who are causing climate change by polluting the atmosphere with excess carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases. And this is where our luck sonrrie, if the problem we've caused us, so we can fix it. We already have the necessary technology, can and should cut by 50% the emiciones CO2 and by 2050 for industrialized countries to reduce up to 80% its emiciones. If we achieve these objectives, we will be able keep rising global temperatures below 2 ° C, as a key measure.
CO2 y COMPAÑIA



Evolution of anthropogenic global emissions of CO2 in petagrams of carbon per year from 1958 to 2003. What is emitted (black broken line) and what remains in the atmosphere (in blue). Only part of the CO2 emitted (about half) accumulates in the atmosphere (blue area) and that a considerable part of CO2 being absorbed photosynthetically by ocean plankton and terrestrial vegetation (green area), which thus increases terrestrial biomass. The emissions growth is fairly uniform, except during the oil crisis of 1979 and subsequent years, and during the crisis in the former Soviet Union. However, the evolution of what stays in the atmosphere (or what is absorbed by terrestrial vegetation and oceans) is highly variable.
An important factor of climate change is that people feel involved. This is a year to be near people, although siuación appears as a trigger for conflict. Moreover, the discourse is so negative fitted which also affects firms that benefited from the devaluation, as they replace imports or increase exports. In these cases, the gloomy weather can not be changed because many HR executives believe that changing the attitude of people must be planned in a rational, when in fact come into play more complex and random elements. In the background is evidence that managers have little willingness to put aside their own paradigms and flexible to listen to others. Try to learn to detect behaviors of people, composed of images (some positive and some negative), feelings, moods, fantasies, etc.., Which encompass much more than economic status. These factors are not within the common but rational schemes are very important. And they must be considered because undoubtedly impact on all processes and business performance.
SENTENCES
1-) In the background is evidence that managers have little willingness to put aside their own paradigms and flexible to listen to others.
- Nominal Part: In the background
Core: background
- Verbal Part: is evidence that managers have little willingness to put aside their own paradigms and flexible to listen to others.
2-) The emissions growth is fairly uniform, except during the oil crisis of 1979 and subsequent years, and during the crisis in the former Soviet Union.
-Nominal Part: The emissions growth
-Core: is
- Verbal Part: is fairly uniform, except during the oil crisis of 1979 and subsequent years, and during the crisis in the former Soviet Union
3-) Climate change is already harming ecosystems and threatening the livelihoods of millions.
-Nominal Part: Climate Change
-Core: is
- Verbal Part: is already harming ecosystems and threatening the livelihoods of millions.

WORDS

1-) POLLUTE

tr.v., -lut·ed, -lut·ing, -lutes.
To make unfit for or harmful to living things, especially by the addition of waste matter. See synonyms at contaminate.
To make less suitable for an activity, especially by the introduction of unwanted factors: The stadium lights polluted the sky around the observatory.
To render impure or morally harmful; corrupt.
To make ceremonially impure; profane: "Churches and altars were polluted by atrocious murders".

2-) willingness

The quality or state of being willing; free choice or consent of the will; freedom from reluctance; readiness of the mind to do or forbear.
Sweet is the love which comes with willingness.

3-) MELTING
., melt·ed, melt·ing, melts.
v.intr.
To be changed from a solid to a liquid state especially by the application of heat.
To dissolve: Sugar melts in water.
To disappear or vanish gradually as if by dissolving: The crowd melted away after the rally.
To pass or merge imperceptibly into something else: Sea melted into sky along the horizon.
To become softened in feeling: Our hearts melted at the child's te

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario