While many of the countries of Europe are exceptionally well managed with regard to environmental problems such as waste disposal, greenhouse gas emissions, water pollution etc. there are still some problems with urban emissions, and industrial operating sites, With the exception of the old Soviet Union sites creating oil field pollution and the Chernobyl impacts which still linger.In areas such as electric power generation the use of wind and sea power is among the highest in the world, ecological success stories like the return of seahorse to the Thames River are common. In Norway for example all waste gases from natural gas production are captured and reinfected into the producing formation.
Much of Europe is densely populated.
yes
no
They exist because Europe decided to make them lol
No.
Francium doesn't exist in the environment.
They still exist in Europe.
to determine what problem exist and how to correct them
The biggest contribution of Blaise Pascal in physics is his contribution towards atmospheric pressure. He discovered that vacuums are real and exist in the real world.
Any links exist between etymology and chemistry as sciences.
bbb
Yes it does it's in Europe.
Northern Europe is full of plains and mountains.