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It means how much fossil fuels you use in your daily life.Each person has a carbon footprint of how much waste they produce.
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.
Yes. Your carbon footprint is the measure of how much carbon dioxide equivalent you, or any of your activities produce. A car burns petrol (gasoline) so its use has a 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.
No, a carbon footprint (the amount of carbon emissions we are responsible for) is not good for you, or the earth. Unfortunately, just about everyone has a carbon footprint, some much bigger than others. We should try to make our personal one as small as possible. While we wait for governments to act we can do our own bit to slow climate change.This video about climate change explains the concept of carbon footprint.
yes. if we don't control how much co2 we release.
The half.
A carbon footprint is the measure of how much carbon you and your activities and lifestyle cost the planet. High-consumption nations and lifestyles affect their carbon footprint. Developed countries use far more energy to run their businesses, transport and the personal lifestyles of their citizens. As energy now comes from burning fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas), their carbon footprint is high.
It depends how much energy and electricity you use in your life time. It measures your carbon emissions.
the carbon foot print shows how much co2 was released when the food was traveling around the world.
the carbon foot print shows how much co2 was released when the food was traveling around the world.
A carbon footprint is the measure of how much carbon you and your activities and lifestyle cost the planet. Developed countries use far more energy to run their businesses, transport and the personal lifestyles of their citizens. As energy now comes from burning fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas), their carbon footprint is high.