We can observe how an art and stage performance company used IT like no one could ever imagine. Cirque rooted IT in all its business processes. Cirque Memory is a knowledge repository used to store all relevant information on artists’ make-up and costumes, sets, and staging. Advantages of Cirque Memory are to transfer knowledge across, ongoing improvement, knowledge, growth, improvement, good memory, ill-structured, design. IT life cycle, different departments for each thing e.g costume, makeup, props etc. The Cirque Memory was a reliable data source and provided valuable information to its employees anywhere in the world with the help of numerous applications.…
his article was written Chris Eboch, who is a science writer, and it was published in the December 2013/January 2014 edition of the Chemistry magazine Chem Matters, a magazine based in Washington DC, USA. The article is called Global Climate change; A reality check and its aim is to inform the public, particularly high school students, about the damaging effects of global warming on the environment. The author firstly talks about the process of global warming, the gases that cause the greenhouse effect leading to global warming. She then retrospectively looks at how we know that human activities have led to increase in greenhouse gases, and supports her claims with studies. The next section talks about the global warming potential, or the potential temperature that the Earth can rise to due to global warming and accelerate the effects of global warming, such as the increasing average level of the sea. She then moves to talk about what each individual can do to lessen the effects of global warming, and talks about the society's need to reduce carbon dioxide emission and the ways in which to do so.…
Did you know that by our everyday habits and choices, the average American puts out 22 tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) per year? Experts studying the recent climate history of the earth agree now that global warming is occurring at a precipitous rate, and human activities are the dominant force driving the trend. Our smokestacks, tailpipes, and burning forests emit CO2 and other gasses that add to the planet’s natural greenhouse effect, allowing sunlight in, but preventing some of the resulting heat from radiating back to space. Many climate experts say that without big curbs in greenhouse gas emissions, the 21st century could see temperatures rise 3 to 8 degrees, weather patterns sharply shift, ice sheets shrink, and seas rise several feet. The problem of global warming seems overwhelming, but there is a lot you can do to help. Reducing your personal share of global warming emissions is easier than you think.…
Since the beginnings of the Industrial Age in the mid 19th century, the earth has experienced a very rapid increase in the amount of pollutants in the air and the water, due to emissions from automobiles, factories, chemical plants and other manufacturing methods which use fossil fuels, such as coal and petroleum, to create power. But within the last thirty years or so, the amount of pollution in our air and water has reached what some consider as a tipping point, meaning that pollution is slowly yet surely poisoning not only our air and water but also living environments all over the planet. Many proposals have been put forward concerning ways to decrease pollution and to help slow down global warming, yet the causes and effects of air and…
According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”), the increase in anthropogenic CO2 emissions has led to the increase in global temperatures in the past century . Because of the preponderance of evidence linking greenhouse gases and climate change, governments worldwide are developing policy to reduce CO2 emissions.…
Recently, scientists have studied both short- and long-term measurements of atmospheric CO2 levels. Their data revealed that human activities are significantly altering the natural carbon cycle. Since the beginning of the industrial revolution, human activities such as the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation have accelerated, and both have contributed to a long-term rise in atmospheric CO2. Burning oil and coal releases carbon into the atmosphere far more rapidly than it is being removed, and this imbalance causes atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations to increase. In addition, by clearing forests, we reduce the ability of photosynthesis to remove CO2 from the atmosphere, also resulting in a net increase. Because of these human activities, atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations are higher today than they have been over the last half-million years or longer.…
A topic that is becoming more and more pivotal to Governments plans by the decade is the environment. Technology has continued to improve over the years and has enabled us to understand the amount of pollution that’s been produced as a bi-product of our output each year. The importance of this subject was shown not only by Britain, but some of the most powerful nations in the world including USA, China, India and the whole of the EU when the Kyoto treaty was signed in 1997. This was an agreement where all nations involved agreed to legally binding reductions in their emissions of carbon dioxide by 2010. […
Regardless of one’s stance on the global warming debate, all sides can agree on one simple fact: emissions and waste created in an industrial society pollute the air, water, and earth. Working to reduce atmospheric levels of pollution, including greenhouse gases, promotes green energy and industry while helping society adapt to a planet-…
Take a look at the world around us and think what it may look like in 20 years. Every day this environment is changing and not always for the better. Things we do in everyday life are destroying our environment. For instance, driving cars, using electricity from coal-fired powerplants, or heating our homes with oil or natural gas, all have devastating affects on our environment. One of those affects is global warming. There are people who dispute the effects of global warming, but scientist have proven that levels of Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere have increased by over 10% since 1950, while average temperatures have risen by over 0.5°C/1°F in the same period (n.d. Global Warming and the Greenhouse Effect).…
One of the largest problems tackling with our society today, interfering with our lives and causing irreparable damage is pollution. Yes, you’ve heard it time and time again, but what are we doing to stop it? Let me simplify it for you… we aren’t doing anything to stop pollution, the contamination of harmful substances into our environment. Good morning everyone, I’m here to discuss the urging issue of pollution. Pollution is everywhere. It's human-made and everywhere in our environment. We put it into our air, our water and our land. It includes noise, light and visual pollution. Everywhere we turn in this man-made world we see, feel, hear and are surrounded by…pollution.…
By allowing our planet to grow in a healthier, cleaner, and natural way, we will overcome global warming and it will be easier for us all to take care of our planet. Helping to keep our planet clean such as using less water in homes, recycling paper products, glass, aluminum, and oil, and also avoiding certain harmful products can result in lowering our man-made greenhouse gases. “According to the Energy Information Administration, the United States, China, Russia, Japan, and India together account for 54% of the world’s total carbon dioxide emissions.” (Source E) Since this represents the largest share of man-made greenhouse gases, we all should try these simple tasks to help our economy, and altogether our planet.…
Human activities have a significant impact on global warming, not the least of which through our contribution to the increase in carbon emissions and physical waste on the planet. Through our industrialized, globalized lifestyles and economy, we use a tremendous amount of power, usually sourced from oil and fossil fuels (Weart, 2004). Due to this, the use of power plants, cars and electricity pumps carbon emissions into the air, where they contribute even further to the greenhouse effect. What’s more, our manufacturing of non-biodegradable products like plastics and the like is leading to the filling up of our world’s landfills, taking up more and more space on the planet and emitting more and more methane…
their own plan. This saved them a great amount of time with out the usual…
When the world became more industrialized, the amount of carbon dioxide that was being emitted into the atmosphere increased. In the past hundred years or so, that number has more or less skyrocketed when compared to the previous amount due to the invention and mass distribution of automobiles, aircraft, trains, and boats. The surplus of greenhouse gasses are beyond what the earth can store and are creating a pseudo blanket around the world. The earth has thence become more and more hot, “…the globe has heated up by about one degree Fahrenheit over the past century—and it has heated up more intensely over the past two decades.” (IPCC, 2001) To be able to correctly put that into perspective one must have the knowledge that the temperature difference between the ice age and current times is nine degrees. The potential repercussions of the increase in global temperature include more intense storms, more severe droughts, and rising sea levels. There are several ways to have a more positive impact on the environment. Everything from buying more energy efficient cars to helping control the population has the potential to help reduce the effects of global warming.…
Tradable permits are an effective way of correcting market failure as they attempt to achieve government objectives of reducing emissions. An alternative to full allocation of property rights is for governments to cap pollution at what they judge to be the optimal level. Firms are then allocated permits to allow them to emit a certain level of pollution in an agreed time period (say a year) but can sell any permits that they do not need to other firms.…