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Controlling the greenhouse effect: five global regimes compared

Part of the Brookings Occasional Papers series
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Roughly 30 percent of the solar radiation directed toward the earth is reflected directly back into outer space.

The remaining 70 percent is absorbed by earth and re-emitted outward as long-wave?or infra-red?radiation.

While transparent to incoming solar radiation, certain gases--notably carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide, methane, and chlorofluorocarbons?absorb, or "trap," this outgoing infra-red radiation near the earth's surface, producing an increase in temperature.

This is the so-called greenhouse effect. The greater the concentration of these greenhouse gases, the more pronounced will be the effect.

Despite uncertainties, the scientific consensus recorded at Villach, Austria, in 1985 was that "the understanding of the greenhouse question is sufficiently developed that scientists and policy-makers should begin an active collaboration to explore the effectiveness of alternatives and adjustments." The recent scientific asse

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Product Details
Brookings Institution Press
0815707150 / 9780815707158
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
01/12/2010
United States
English
40 pages
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