Global Warming: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Energy and Power of the Committee on Energy and Commerce, House of Representatives, One Hundred Third Congress, First Session, Part 2U.S. Government Printing Office, 1993 |
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Page 11
... additional areas of forest or tree plantation and through protection of existing forest lands . In many instances it is appropriate to harvest trees from sustainable plantations to provide energy or other services because these tree ...
... additional areas of forest or tree plantation and through protection of existing forest lands . In many instances it is appropriate to harvest trees from sustainable plantations to provide energy or other services because these tree ...
Page 17
... additional help from you as time goes on . Thank you . Mr. SHARP . The gentleman from Illinois . Mr. HASTERT . I would like to associate my remarks with my col- leagues . My time on this committee has been of a shorter tenure , but ...
... additional help from you as time goes on . Thank you . Mr. SHARP . The gentleman from Illinois . Mr. HASTERT . I would like to associate my remarks with my col- leagues . My time on this committee has been of a shorter tenure , but ...
Page 23
... additional carbon storage within the forest soil and litter . Risks and Uncertainties Of Tree Planting While it may be tempting to conclude that trees planted for the purpose of storing carbon long - term should be simply left alone to ...
... additional carbon storage within the forest soil and litter . Risks and Uncertainties Of Tree Planting While it may be tempting to conclude that trees planted for the purpose of storing carbon long - term should be simply left alone to ...
Page 29
... additional development and research to be done , and more importantly perhaps is some demonstration programs and plants that we need to get underway . We are start- ing some of those . For example , we have two major demonstrations with ...
... additional development and research to be done , and more importantly perhaps is some demonstration programs and plants that we need to get underway . We are start- ing some of those . For example , we have two major demonstrations with ...
Page 42
... additional three trees per house ( raising canopy cover by about 30 percent per dwelling ) would result in approximately 30 percent savings in annual cooling energy used . AMERICAN FORESTS The impact of large - scale tree plantings 42.
... additional three trees per house ( raising canopy cover by about 30 percent per dwelling ) would result in approximately 30 percent savings in annual cooling energy used . AMERICAN FORESTS The impact of large - scale tree plantings 42.
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Common terms and phrases
action reduces greenhouse Administration aerosols areas atmosphere benefits biomass carbon dioxide carbon emissions carbon equivalent Carbon Offset carbon sequestration Chairman Change Action Plan Climate Change Action CO₂ emissions commitments CONGRESS THE LIBRARY conservation cost cost-effective countries decade deforestation economic effect efforts electric emissions from projected emissions reductions energy crops energy efficiency Energy Policy Act Energy Star environmental estimates Federal forestry fossil fuel funding gases global warming goal greenhouse gas emissions growth harvest HASTERT improve increase industry initiatives investment IPCC issue joint implementation land landfill MARKET IMPACT methane million through 2000 MMT of carbon models monitoring National natural gas Niagara Mohawk nitrous oxide offset opportunities PacifiCorp partnership percent potential private sector production projected 2000 levels radiative forcing reduce greenhouse gas renewable energy result SHARP sinks soil strategy technologies TIERNEY tree planting undiscounted 1991 dollars urban utilities voluntary wood
Popular passages
Page 151 - ... projects and activities. Contributing to the awareness of the importance of indigenous concerns was the role played by indigenous peoples and their supporters at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) held in Rio de Janeiro in June 1992.
Page 204 - Convention, stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system. Such a level should be achieved within a time-frame sufficient to allow ecosystems to adapt naturally to climate change, to ensure that food production is not threatened and to enable economic development to proceed in a sustainable manner.
Page 73 - Sharp, Chairman Subcommittee on Energy and Power Committee on Energy and Commerce United States House of Representatives Washington, DC 20515 Dear Mr.
Page 294 - The size of this warming is broadly consistent with predictions of climate models, but it is also of the same magnitude as natural climate variability. Thus the observed increase could be largely due to this natural variability; alternatively this variability and other human factors could have offset a still larger humaninduced greenhouse warming.
Page 300 - The results of scenarios can vary considerably from actual outcomes even over short time horizons. Confidence in scenario outputs decreases as the time horizon increases, because the basis for the underlying assumptions becomes increasingly speculative. Considerable uncertainties surround the evolution of the types and levels of human activities (including economic growth and structure), technological advances, and human responses to possible environmental, economic and institutional constraints....
Page 294 - ... conclusions which we summarize as follows: Gases and Aerosols • Depletion of ozone in the lower stratosphere in the middle and high latitudes results in a decrease in radiative forcing which is believed to be comparable in magnitude to the radiative forcing contribution of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) (globally-averaged) over the last decade or so. • The cooling effect of aerosols resulting from sulphur emissions may have offset a significant part of the greenhouse warming in the Northern Hemisphere...
Page 360 - Mr. Chairman, Members of the Committee The Global Climate Coalition (GCC), the leading business voice on climate change, is a broad-based organization of business trade associations and companies representing virtually all elements of United States industry, including the energy-producing and energyconsuming sectors. The Coalition was established in 1989 to coordinate business participation in the scientific and policy debate on the global climate change issue.
Page 299 - Stratospheric Ozone Depletion. — Even if the control measures of the 1990 London amendments to the Montreal Protocol were to be implemented by all nations, the abundance of stratospheric chlorine and bromine will increase over the next several years. The Antarctic ozone hole, caused by industrial halocarbons, will therefore recur each spring. In addition, as the weight of evidence suggests that these gases are also responsible for the observed reductions in middle- and high latitude stratospheric...
Page 186 - September 1984, working either in the Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs of the De-partment of State or in one of the Bureaus of the Agency for International Development.
Page 298 - A comprehensive, multi-year, high spatial resolution satellite data set has been used to to estimate that the average rate of deforestation in the Brazilian Amazonian forest between 1978 and 1989 was 2.1 million hectares (Mha) per year. The rate increased between 1978 and the mid-1980s, and has decreased to 1.4 Mha/yr in 1990. The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), using information supplied by individual countries, recently estimated that the rate of global tropical deforestation in closed...