Carbon Dioxide
atmosphere
78% Nitrogen, 20% O2, .93%a Argon, .93% Greenhouse gases, .04% CO2, hydrogen/helium/ozone
Greenhouse effect
characteristic of the Earth's atmosphere based on the presence of important gases including water vapor and carbon dioxide to trap and retain heat, leading to temperatures that can sustain life
collective action
cooperation and coordination between individuals/states/etc. to achieve common goals and outcomes
command-and-control approach
forms of regulation that depend on governmental laws and agencies to enforce rules, including things such as regulated limits on pollution or fuel efficiency standards, or bans (with plastic bags)
Uneven development
geographic tendency within capitalism to produce highly disparate economic conditions (wealth/poverty) and economic activity (production/consumption) in different places not just induced by money but also by an unequal concentration of power
surplus value
in political economic thought, the value produced by underpaying labor or over-extracting from the environment, which is accumulated by owners and investors
market-based approach
market response model, scarcity (of trees), higher costs (production of paper bags), alternatives (1950s plastic bags), replacement (1980s)
cap and trade
market-based system to manage environmental pollutants where a total limit is placed on all emissions in a jurisdiction (state, country, worldwide, etc.) and individual people or firms possess transferable shares of total, theoretically leading to the most efficient overall system to maintain and reduce pollution levels overall commodifying pollution; countries that don't use all of their pollution limit can sell it to other countries; putting a price on externalities
carbon sink
natural (photosynthesis) or artificial (landfills) capture and storage of carbon from the atmosphere, goes into the geosphere, captured by biological or physical means more carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere and stored in plants than is emitted (human activity upset the balance)
carbon emissions
primary greenhouse gas emitted through human activities, mainly through the combustion of fossil fuels for energy and transportation both human activities and natural emissions like decomposition, ocean relate, volcanic eruptions and respiration
incentive-based approach
problem (depletion of natural resources), alternatives, innovation (point of weakness), cost (gradual change), competition (new methods among industries)
Photosynthesis
process through which plants use the sun's energy to convert carbon dioxide into organic compounds, especially sugars that are used to build tissues used by plants to produce energy, makes plants volatile carbon sinks
Montreal Protocol
responding to CFC problem (damaging ozone in stratosphere) drastic reductions/eliminations in industrialized countries developing nations phase it out later DUPONT involved in conference HFCs become substitutes for CFCs (big problem)
capital accumulation
tendency in capitalism for profits, capital goods, savings, and value to flow toward, pool in, and/or accrue in specific places used to create more wealth or appreciation value leads to centralization and concentration of both money and power causes uneven development and disparity in wealth/poverty
carbon sequestration
the capture and storage of carbon from the atmosphere into the biosphere or geosphere through either biological means, as in plant photosynthesis, or engineered means
carbon cycle
the system through which carbon circulates through the Earth's geosphere, atmosphere, and biosphere, specifically including exchanges between carbon in the earth and the atmosphere through combustion and back again through sequestration circulation of the element through the geosphere to the hydrosphere and then back again through combustion, respiration, photosynthesis, etc.
coase theorem
thesis based on neoclassical economics holding that externalities can be most efficiently controlled through contracts and bargaining between parties, assuming the transaction costs of reaching a bargain are not excessive Montreal Protocol, 1987
CO2's importance
vital to life, animals/fungi/bacteria emit, plants use to produce energy in photosynthesis, also emitted by decay/fire
natural greenhouse gases
water vapor, nitrous oxide, methane, ozone
human contribution to greenhouse gases
world average temperature is currently 15 degrees celsius but is increasing by 2 degrees celsius. changes in weather patters/seasons. loss of permafrost, biodiversity, land, infrastructure