Well it certainly means that ur lightening ur foot on earth basically meaning that the planet is getting better and your helping it out a lot instead of letting so much things well never use ever again like paper,it comes from trees and if we stop using it so much and throwing it away when it's blank means that your killing trees for no reason and sending it 2 the dump making the earth get covered in many kinds of trash. If u don't do anything related 2 this, yur basically lightening yur carbon footprint.
Carbon footprint is usually used to refer to a single person (me), or a thing (this apple), or a family or household. It means the amount of carbon dioxide (or equivalent) released into the atmosphere by the activities, or existence of a peron, thing, or group.However, the amount of trees cut down every year affects the carbon footprint of the whole world. Trees (and all growing vegetation) remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis. The oxygen is released and the carbon is stored in the wood of the trees.So when we cut down a tree we increaseour carbon footprint.
A carbon footprint is not an object, it is a way of calculating how much your activities contribute to the burden of global warming. Your carbon footprint would include:the carbon dioxide fro ythe fuels yu burnmethane from the cows producing your meattreees cut down by your paper purchasesmethane from waste sites you contribute toetc.
A carbon footprint is not an object, it is a way of calculating how much your activities contribute to the burden of global warming. Your carbon footprint would include:the carbon dioxide fro ythe fuels yu burnmethane from the cows producing your meattreees cut down by your paper purchasesmethane from waste sites you contribute toetc.
Carbon dioxide is produced by our life processes, in the manufacture of everything we own, in all the motorized transportation that we use and in all the non-plant foods that we eat. It is not possible to produce (or be responsible for the production of) a zero emission of carbon dioxide. By minimizing transportation, buying "green", recycling, not using heating or cooling systems more than necesasry and all the ways available to cut our "carbon footprint" we can minimize our impact.
No it won 't. Carbon dioxide is from the trees. If people cut down trees we won't have carbon dioxide.
Recycling wood/paper/cardboard reduces the demand for fresh-cut timber. Consequently, fewer trees have to be cut down and more forests can remain intact, providing habitat for plants and animals, a heat and carbon sink, and a portion of the oxygen we breathe. Rainforests and recycling are not necessarily directly related, unless the wood in question came from a rainforest-type tree. Recycling will not help save the rainforest unless it involves recycling products that originally came from the rainforest. The main reasons that rainforests are being cut down are cattle ranching and timber harvesting. Rather than recycling to save the rainforest, one should not buy products that cause rainforest deforestation. Recycling, however, does reduce the amount of waste in landfills and reduces the need to mine for new materials.
The easiest way to cut out dog footprint stencils is with velum and a craft knife. Trace the footprint on the velum and carefully cut it out with your craft knife for a stencil that can be used multiple times.
90% of all paper bottles and other recycleables
fewer trees get cut downless trash in the fieldshelps to clean the air because fewer trees are getting cut down
carbon dioxide
First of all, we should not feel bad about having a carbon "footprint" (I hate that term), simply because we are human beings. Don't run around feeling guilty unless somehow you are part of producing an excessive amount of carbon. What about our production of methane, like all animals? But regarding the trees, for every tree we cut down for lumber or other uses, we should endeavor to replace that tree by planting another. This because trees take carbon out of the air through the process of photosynthesis The carbon is then held in the tree itself as it is mostly carbon. The tree leaves produce more oxygen for the life of animals, including the humans. So that's an easy one. The key is to not feel guilty being a human being and using the earth's resources, but to simply use them responsibly.
Carbon dioxide