{"id":7351,"date":"2019-01-25T15:02:48","date_gmt":"2019-01-25T14:02:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.teleforwarding.com\/?p=7351"},"modified":"2022-07-07T14:17:42","modified_gmt":"2022-07-07T12:17:42","slug":"telecoms-sustainability-intro","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.teleforwarding.com\/blog\/telecoms-sustainability-intro\/","title":{"rendered":"An Introduction to Global Warming and Climate Change"},"content":{"rendered":"
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As we are slowly approaching the end of the first quarter of the millennium, society is becoming increasingly aware of the impact their lives have on the state of the environment. For decades, there has been talk about the effects of the use of fossil fuels on global warming and climate change. Still, every solution seems to be very big and out of reach for us to be able to make any significant change to reduce the effects of global warming.<\/p>\n
To understand climate change, we first need to discuss what is global warming<\/a>. Global warming means that the temperature on our earth is raising constantly. This leads to climate change, i.e. not only the temperatures but also the weather and climate conditions are changing, which has diverse effects on our plant and environment.<\/p>\n One of the most well-known spokesperson for the effects of climate change is the American politician Al Gore, who released his documentary film An Inconvenient Truth<\/a> about global climate change in 2006. His film was widely acclaimed and evoked a comprehensive range of positive (and unfortunately negative) responses to the climate issue. Effectively, Gore helped bring to light the realities of what humans have done to our planet over time with regards to environmental pollution as a cause of climate change. Moreover, he offered ways that we, as an entire society, can make positive changes to slow down and potentially stop any further damage and reduce the consequences of global warming.<\/p>\n For many of us these things can seem out of reach for us to feel like we are making a difference, even if it\u2019s something really small. Every one of us creates something called a carbon Footprint. The magazine TakePart<\/a> gives a great definition of the carbon footprint as: \u201cthe amount of greenhouse gases\u2014primarily carbon dioxide\u2014released into the atmosphere by a particular human activity\u201d. This means that everything we do, from the food we consume to our chosen means of travel, has some sort of effect on the amount of greenhouse gases that are dispersed into the world.<\/p>\n Look for example at the impact that human involvement has had on temperature changes. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change<\/a> (IPCC) is an international organisation founded in 1988 by the United Nations that looks at the facts and figures which directly and indirectly contribute to climate change and the socio-economic and environmental consequences of global warming.<\/p>\nThe causes of global warming<\/h2>\n