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Burning of the fossil fuels releases the carbon dioxide.
Burning fossil fuels.
Burning of the fossil fuels releases the carbon dioxide.
Burning oil or gas releases Carbon Dioxide into the atmosphere, which as a result is bad for us, the animals and of course the earth itself!
Burning anything releases carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, as most things are largely made of carbon. Burning vegetation is really part of the carbon cycle, but burning of fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas) in industry, transport and the generation of electricity, releases carbon dioxide that has been sequestered underground for 300 million years. This is why carbon dioxide levels are increasing in the atmosphere.
The process of decay releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere
Burning fossil fuel releases carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas which is building up in the atmosphere.
burning fossil fuels
Combustion releases carbon dioxide as the carbon in the organic material is joined with oxygen from the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide is understood to be a greenhouse gas, meaning it traps heat in the atmosphere.
Burning fossil fuels releases CO2, carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. CO2 is a green house gas that traps the heat of the sun in our atmosphere
the disadvantage is that they could die out
when a car is driven, the gasoline it burns as fuel releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.