Renewables: An Inconvenient Energy Reality

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
L. Alan Weakly
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
5
File Size:
444 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2008

Abstract

Global warming is a political reality in the United States today. The actual impact of the continued utilization of fossil fuels is not known and is open to debate. However, the growing concern about the continued use of these fuels is problematic. There are technologies available to us today that would permit America to meet its future energy demand and not contribute to global warming. The inconvenient reality is that fossil fuels cannot completely be replaced with energy conservation and the use of wind, solar, hydroelectric, geothermal and nuclear energy. The connection between the greenhouse effect and global climate change was first identified by physicist John Tyndall in the 1860s. To prove the greenhouse hypothesis, Roger Revelle and his research team started measuring carbon dioxide concentrations in the earth?s atmosphere in the early 1960s (Becker, 2007). With the rising concern about global warming, scientists throughout the world have been obtaining surface and air temperature data. Scientists have also been comparing CO2 concentrations found in glaciers throughout the world with theorized annual temperatures. Data for both dates back 1,000 years. Armed with this data, many nations of the world and the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) have concluded that climate change is a reality. The IPCC also concluded that this climate change is the result of mankind?s consumption of fossil fuels and that catastrophic consequences will occur on a
Citation

APA: L. Alan Weakly  (2008)  Renewables: An Inconvenient Energy Reality

MLA: L. Alan Weakly Renewables: An Inconvenient Energy Reality. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2008.

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