14 November 2012

7 ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS THAT ARE WORSE THAN WE THOUGHT



With as much attention as the environment has been getting lately, you’d think that we’d be further along in our fight to preserve the world’s species, resources and the beautiful diversity of nature. Unfortunately, things aren’t nearly that rosy. In fact, many of the environmental problems that have received the most public attention are even worse than we thought – from destruction in the rain forest to melting glaciers in the Arctic. We’ve got a lot of work to do.
7. Mammal Extinction

One in four mammals is threatened with extinction. That’s 25%, a huge number that will totally change the ecology of every corner of the earth. We could see thousands of species die out in our lifetime, and the rate of habitat loss and hunting in crucial areas like Southeast Asia, Central Africa and Central and South America is growing so rapidly, these animals barely have a chance.
If you think the extinction of an animal like the beautiful Iberian Lynx is no big deal, and wouldn’t have that much of an effect on the planet, think again. Not only would we be losing – mostly due to our own disregard for our surroundings – so much of the awe-inspiring diversity of nature, mass extinctions like this would cause a serious imbalance in the world’s food chain. When a predator disappears, the prey will multiply. When prey dies out, the predator will see its ranks decrease as well. Many people fail to realize just how interconnected all species on this planet really are.
6. The Ocean Dead Zones

In oceans around the world, there are eerie areas that are devoid of nearly all life. These ‘dead zones’ are characterized by a lack of oxygen, and they’re caused by excess nitrogen from farm fertilizers, emissions from vehicles and factories, and sewage. The number of dead zones has been growing fast – since the 1960’s, the number of dead zones has doubled every 10 years. They range in size from under a square mile to 45,000 square miles, and the most infamous one of all is in the Gulf of Mexico, a product of toxic sludge that flows down the Mississippi from farms in the Midwest. These ‘hypoxic’ zones now cover an area roughly the size of Oregon.
Spanish researches recently found that many species die off at oxygen levels well above the current definition of ‘uninhabitable’, suggesting that the extent of dead zones in coastal areas that support fishing is much worse than previously thought. Robert Diaz, a Virginia Institute of Marine Science biologist, said “Everything is pointing towards a more desperate situation in all aquatic systems, freshwater and marine. That’s pretty clear. People should be worried, all over the world.”
As if that weren’t bad enough, global warming will likely aggravate the problem. A rise in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will change rainfall patterns, which could create an increase in runoff from rivers into the seas in many areas.
5. Collapsing Fish Stock

Millions of people across the world depend upon fish as a major staple in their diet. As such, commercial fishermen have been pulling such a huge quantity of fish from the oceans that we’re heading toward a global collapse of all species currently fished – possibly as soon as the year 2048. Like large-scale mammal extinction, the collapse of fish species would have a major impact on the world’s ecosystems.
It’s not too late – yet – if overfishing and other threats to fish populations are reduced as soon as possible. Marine systems are still biologically diverse, but catastrophic loss of fish species is close at hand. 29 per cent of species have been fished so heavily or have been so affected by pollution that they’re down to 10 per cent of their previous population levels. If we continue the way we are fishing today, there will be a 100 per cent collapse by mid-century, so we’ve got to turn this around fast.
4. Destruction of the Rain Forest

‘Saving the rain forest’ has been at the forefront of the environmental movement for decades, yet here we are facing huge losses in the Amazon all the same. You might have thought that, with all the attention the rain forest has gotten, it wouldn’t need so much saving anymore – but unfortunately, global warming and deforestation mean that half of the Amazon rain forest will likely be destroyed or severely damaged by 2030.
The World Wildlife Fund concluded this summer that agriculture, drought, fire, logging and livestock ranching will cause major damage to 55 percent of the Amazon rain forest in the next 22 years. Another 4 percent will see damage due to reduced rainfall, courtesy of global warming. These factors will destroy up to 80 percent of the rain forest’s wildlife. Losing 60 percent of the rain forest would accelerate global warming and affect rainfall in places as far away as India. Massive destruction to the rain forest would have a domino effect on the rest of the world.
The WWF says that the ‘point of no return’, from which recovery will be impossible, is only 15 to 25 years away.
3. Polar Sea Ice Loss

Polar sea ice is melting at an unprecedented rate, and it’s not showing any signs of slowing down. It’s perhaps the most dramatic, startling visual evidence of global warming, and it’s got scientists rushing to figure out just how big of an effect the melting is going to have on the rest of the world.
British researchers said last week that the thickness of sea ice in the Arctic decreased dramatically last winter for the first time since records began in the early 1990s. The research showed a significant loss in thickness on the northern ice cap after the record loss of ice during the summer of 2007.
Scientific American warns that “human fingerprints have been detected” on both the Arctic and Antarctic regions. Antarctica had previously appeared to be the only continent on the planet where humanity’s impact on climate change hadn’t been observed. The collapse of the Larsen B and Wilkins ice shelves in the Antarctic Peninsula shows just how fast the region is warming.
2. CO2 Levels in the Atmosphere

The afore mentioned polar sea ice loss is yet another sinister sign of carbon dioxide levels building up in the atmosphere – the main force behind global warming. Greenhouse gas emissions caused by our modern way of life – vehicles, power plants, factories, giant livestock farms – will bring devastating climate change within decades if they stay at today’s levels.
Average temperatures could increase by as much as 12 degrees Fahrenheit by the end of the century if emissions continue to rise, a figure that would easily make the world virtually uninhabitable for humans. A global temperature rise of just 7.2 degrees Fahrenheit would cause a catastrophic domino effect, bringing weather extremes that would result in food and water shortages and destructive floods.
The most recent report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change represents “the final nail in the coffin” of climate change denial, representing the most authoritative picture to date that global warming is caused by human activity. According to the panel, we must make a swift and significant switch to clean, efficient and renewable energy technologies in order to prevent the worst-case scenario.
1. Population Explosion

Whether we like to admit it or not, our very own rapidly multiplying presence on this planet is the biggest environmental problem there is, and it’s getting bigger by the minute. We voraciously consume resources, pollute the air and water, tear down natural habitats, introduce species into areas where they don’t belong and destroy ecosystems to the point of causing millions of species to become endangered and, all too often, go extinct.
It took nearly all of human history – from the first days of man on earth until the early 1800’s – to reach a global population of 1 billion. In just 200 years, we’ve managed to reach 6.5 billion. That means the population has grown more since 1950 than in the previous four million years. We’re adding roughly 74 million people to the planet every year, a scary figure that will probably continue to increase. All of those mouths will need to be fed. All of those bodies will need clean water and a place to sleep. All of the new communities created to house those people will continue to encroach upon the natural world.
All seven environmental problems detailed above are very serious, and we’ve got to start treating them that way. We may not have easy solutions, but the fact is, we simply can’t continue living our lives as if everything is peachy. These problems aren’t going to magically solve themselves. We should have begun acting generations ago, but we can’t go back in time, and that means we have to step up our efforts. If we want to keep this planet a healthy place for humans to live – for our grandchildren to enjoy – it’s time to buckle down and do everything in our power to reverse the damage we’ve done.







13 November 2012

RECYCLING. ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS OF PLASTIC BAGS

WATCH THE VIDEO AND ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS
  1. What environmental effects caused by plastic bags does he mention?
  2. What should we do instead of using plastic bags and throwing them out?
SCRIPT

...I’m here today to talk to you a little bit about the environmental effects of plastic bags.

these little things ,you would never think they create a lot of damage to our earth. Other than the fact that you see them litter all over the streets... and it just..., aesthetically it does not look good and the properties...

These things can also just create all kinds of issues with our wildlife. They mistake these items, these bags for food.

All of us love sea turtles. Sea turtles, thousands are injured or die every year from eating these and there is no reason for it. There is a lot of the wildlife in the oceans, the birds, some of the dolphin and turtles are some of the primary ones that are affected by these bags here. They last forever too, so instead of taking them and throwing them out, just disposing of them, number one try not to use them. You can purchase fabric tote bags to go to a grocery store. When you buy your groceries, put the stuff in your own bag and carry it away, then you don’t need this plastic bag. Some of the other things, when you do get that plastic bag, use it as a small garbage bag at the house. If you have small garbage cans, reuse it there and make sure it’s tied up and goes into your garbage can. Let it be processed through the garbage system. Those are just some of the environmental effects on plastic bags

THE PLASTIC BAG PROBLEM

WATCH THE VIDEO AND ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS
  1. What are some of the advatages of plastic bags?
  2. What percentage of plastic bags are recycled?
  3. What's the worst problem with plastic bags?
  4. What do diamonds and plastic bags have in common?
  5. What happens with plankton in some parts of the Pacific?
  6. Why do sea turtles eat floating plastic bags?
  7. What happens when seagulls or turtles don't choke on the plastic they eat?
SCRIPT
We all love living by the ocean. The sunsets are spectacular and the marine life is breathtaking. The ocean inspires awe and praise to God for his sensational creativity. As followers of Christ, we are not only inspired by the ocean, we are moved to care for it. The Pacific Ocean is facing a crisis created by a human success story. The plastic bag

Plastic bags were first introduced about 25 years ago. They’re cheap to produce and easy to store. We produce between 500 billion and 1 trillion plastic bags every year and only 1 to 3 % are ever recycled. We Californians discard 400 bags per second. The problem with these bags, they don’t biodegrade, they get broken up into smaller pieces but they don’t truly go away.

Diamonds and plastics have something in common- no plastics aren’t a girls’ best friend, but like diamonds, they last for ever. Alarmingly, in some parts of the Pacific plastic outnumbers plankton 6 to 1. Often marine life will mistake plastic for food. Sea turtles will eat a floating plastic bag while mistaking it for a jellyfish. A seagull swoops down and swallows little bits of plastic. If the animals don’t choke on the plastic, it eventually fills up their stomachs and they die of starvation. All plastics are bad, but single-used plastics, like the ever present plastic bag, are becoming a deadly problem in our Pacific Ocean.

God created this earth to sustain life. We want to help restore it to the way he intended, so. How can you help?

WHY PLASTIC BAGS ARE EVIL

WATCH THE VIDEO AND ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS
  1. Why are plastic bags evil?
  2. What happens to a plastic bag after we use it?
  3. How can we help save the world?
SCRIPT

Every time we go to the store, we have to make a choice : paper or plastic. Americans choose plastic one hundred billion times a year and this is a problem because plastic bags are evil. 

It takes oil to make those bags, something like 12 million gallons a year and getting all that oil sucks up some of our own natural resources and kind of ruins others.

What happens to a plastic bag after we use it? Well, even if you put them in the trash, plastic bags are good at floating away and they end up in our streams, where they slide down to our oceans , where they hang out with other trash in places like the North Pacific trash gyre, a space in the Pacific Ocean the size of Texas, that’s made up of more trash than anything else. Eventually, our plastic bags get sucked down to the bottom where animals either eat them or get stuck in them. Animals like fish, turtles, seals and even whales get killed by plastic bags every year. Jerk!

It would be nice if we could recycle these bags, but the truth is most recycling centres just take them to the dump so that they don’t get caught in the machinery and then ruin all the other recycles. 

So, if plastic bags pillage the earth and choke cute furry animals, what about paper? Well, there are problems with that too. So how do you choose the lesser of two evils? Well, what if there is a third option? A great option that could do battle with evil and save the fish, and the turtles, and the seals and the whales, and the monkeys and the birds. Well, there is. The next time you go to the store, bring your own reusable bag and you can help save the world

THE GREAT PACIFIC GARBAGE PATCH

WATCH THE VIDEO AND ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS
  1. How big is the Patch?
  2. Since it's not biodegradable, what will happen to this plastic?
  3. What happens to the plastic due to the effects of the sun, wind and waves?
  4. How many marine mammals and seabirds are killed by plastic?
  5. Where does the plastic come from?
  6. What can be done to fix things?
SCRIPT

In late 1997 there was the discovery of a new continent that exists between the Hawaiian islands and the coast of California. This newly formed continent which is approximately two times the size of Texas is not one that is comprised of land. Disturbingly it’s the result of an estimated 3,5 million tones of floating plastic garbage that continuously circles in the northern Pacific Ocean. There was a particular section of the northern pacific known as the The Pacific Gyre that constantly spins in a vortex effectively trapping the plastic, and anything else that floats into it. Since plastic is not biodegradable, it will continue to float for centuries before it’s broken down by any natural means. Due to the effects of the sun, wind and waves, the plastic disintegrates into small flakes that are being ingested by a variety of sea creatures. The United Nations Environment Programme estimates that plastic debris kills more than 100,000 marine mammals and 1 million sea birds every year. You might be wondering where does all this plastic come from; studies have shown that approximately 80% from land and the other 20% from ships at sea. The bottom line is this massive plastic continent is an environmental catastrophe with impacts that are yet unknown. What can be done to change things? That’s a good question and one that I’m not even sure there’s an answer to. I guess the best thing to do is to try to limit the amount of plastic you purchase and whenever possible use the three “Rs” Reduce, Reuse and Recycle.

PLASTIC BOTTLE PROBLEM


EVICTIONS IN SPAIN _ ARTICLES

The Spanish Platform of People Evicted by Bankia (PAH) members protest in solidarity with the family of a man who committed suicide in Granada on Thursday, at Catalunya square in Barcelona October 26, 2012. REUTERS/Gustau Nacarino/Files

ARTICLES

12 November 2012

WATER AND AIR POLLUTION

       
             WATER POLLUTION                                             AIR POLLUTION

EFFECTS OF NOT RECYCLING. PROBLEMS WITH PLASTIC

  
ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS WITH PLASTIC
THE EFFECTS OF NOT RECYCLING
THE EFFECTS OF NOT RECYCLING WATER BOTTLES


WASTE DISPOSAL

ENVIRONMENT: LISTENING AND READING

SAVE THE EARTH
SAVING THE EARTH
A GREENER WORLD
VIDEO LISTENING QUIZ: EUROPEAN FLIGHTS GROUNDED BY ASH CLOUD
WHAT IS YOUR COUNTRY'S BIGGEST ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEM?
WHAT ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS DOES YOUR COUNTRY HAVE?
CLIMATE CHANGE

GLOBAL WARMING: THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT

 
GLOBAL WARMING (EFFECTS)
GLOBAL WARMING: MAN-MADE OR NOT?
GLOBAL WARMING
GLOBAL WARMING FOR KIDS


GLOBAL WARMING: THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT 1
THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT 2
HOW TO HELP STOP GLOBAL WARMING
TEN THINGS YOU CAN DO TO PREVENT GLOBAL WARMING

DEFORESTATION, OVERPOPULATION, ACID RAIN

                 

DEFORESTATION 1                            OVERPOPULATION 1                       ACID RAIN 1
DEFORESTATION 2                            OVERPOPULATION 2                       ACID RAIN 2
RAIN FOREST DESTRUCTION               OVERPOPULATION 3                   ACID RAIN 3 (FOR KIDS)
RAINFORESTS (FOR KIDS)
TREE LOSS

KILLER TSUNAMIS


Try to answer the following questions without reading the text


  1. What’s the main cause of Tsunamis?
  2. Why has Japan been hit by so many tsunamis?
  3. How fast do waves travel in deep water after an earthquake?
  4. Are they high? Do ships notice the waves?
  5. What happens when the waves enter shallow waters?
  6. Do they go so fast?
  7. How high can they be?
  8. Does the wave break and stop when it reaches the coast?
  9. How far can it go inland?
  10. When is it most dangerous?
  11. What happens when people think it is all over?
  12. When did the deadliest tsunami occur?
  13. Where did the earthquake take place?
  14. How many people died?
  15. Could everybody be warned?
  16. What do the scientists in The Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre do?
  17. Do you remember the pieces of advice they give?

KILLER TSUNAMIS
The warnings are few, the sights are sudden, the tide goes into reverse. A thunderous roar fills the air and then it strikes and when _______________, nothing is left.
A Tsunami

The word in Japanese means “harbour wave”. Japan has been hit by many tsunamis in its history _______________ its location. It lies across the edges of 4 tectonic plates _______________ earthquakes, the principal cause of tsunamis are born.
When two tectonic plates _________________, the resulting earthquake sends an enormous burst of energy up through the ocean, displacing enormous _________________.
A series of waves expands in all directions. In deep water these waves travel fast, up to 500 miles an hour, but only reach a ____________ of a few feet. A passing ship might not even notice. But as the waves enter shallow waters, friction with the ocean floor ____________the waves speed and raises their height until at land fall they can engulf a ten storey ______________.
Unlike _______________ waves, a tsunami wave doesn’t crest at break, _____________, it advances like a wall of water that crashes over the coastline and everything in its way, reaching even ____________ a mile inland.
More damage is caused when the wave recedes dragging everything in it back under water and most tsunamis have multiple waves, each arriving anywhere from 10 to 60 minutes after the first strike just when survivors think ____________________.
The deadliest tsunami ever recorded occurred in December of 2004.
An earthquake off the coast of Indonesia triggered a tsunami that surged across the Indian ocean and reached as far as the coast of Africa. Full sections of cities ________________. More than ______ people died. Most had no way of being _______________.
5.000 miles away, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre in Honolulu is __________ 24 hours a day to prevent a similar tragedy _________________ in the US.
Scientists monitor tremors and quakes from _______________. If a quake big enough to cause a tsunami occurs, it is their job to alert the coastlines in the tsunami’s path.
The ________________is simple: move to a _________________
_______________ that the tsunami has passed and be ready ________________ the ruins left in its wake

AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH



Try to answer the following questions after watching the video
  1. Which natural disasters can you see?
  2. Which have been the hottest years?
  3. Which has been the hottest of all?
  4. Who is causing global warming according to scientists?
  5. Who does Al Gore say he used to be?
  6. Where can you see snow in this trailer?
  7. What has happened?
  8. What will happen within this decade?
  9. Is it only a political issue?
  10. Where do temperature increases take place?
  11. What does that cause?
  12. Which other threat is mentioned?
  13. What’s happening in the Artic?
  14. What will happen to the sea level if this goes on?
  15. Who are the people you can see? What are they doing?
  16. What do we have to do to prevent this from happening?

AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH

If you look at the ten hottest years ever measured, they’ve all occurred in the last 14 years and the ______________________ was 2005.
Scientific consensus is that WE are causing _________________.
I am Al Gore. I _____________________ president of the United States of America.
This is Patagonia 75 years ago and the same glacier today.
This is Mount Kilimanjaro ________________ and last year.
Within ____________________ there will be no more snows of Kilimanjaro.
This is really not a political issue so much as a _________________ issue. Temperature increases are taking place all over the world and that’s causing _________________.
This is the biggest crisis in the history of this country.
Early this morning Hurricane Katrina ____________________ into New Orleans.
Is it possible that we should prepare against other_____________   _____________ terrorists?
From Paramount classics comes a film that has shocked audiences everywhere they’ve ___________.
The Artic is experiencing faster _________________, if this were to go, _________________ worldwide would go up 20 feet.
This is what would happen in Florida around Shanghay home to 40 million people
The area around Calcutta 60 million.
Here’s Manhattan the world trade centre Memorial would be ________________.
Think of the impact of a _________________ thousand refugees, and then imagine a _________________ .
We have to act together to solve this global crisis.  Our ability to live is what is ________________.