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Like all other living organisms, we survive by using Earth’s resources. We’ve done it already in the 1990s, when international cooperation quickly phased out ozone-depleting chemicals and stopped the dangerous ozone hole from getting ever-bigger. We are still in the green for ozone-depleting chemicals. The bill comes due.
These indicators, including but not limited to carbon dioxide, methane, oceanacidification, tropical forest loss, population, GDP, water use, and transportation, have reached the point past natural variation, showing indisputably that the Earth is in a different state than before. .
Possible negative impacts may include changing regional weather patterns — creating or shifting areas of drought or regions that receive extreme precipitation — or altering tropospheric chemistry and ocean circulation patterns. Partially blocking the sun’s rays could interfere with normal plant processes and reduce agricultural yields.
These include climate change, biosphere integrity (functional and generic), land-system change, freshwater use, biogeochemical flows (nitrogen and phosphorus), oceanacidification, atmospheric aerosol pollution, stratospheric ozone depletion, and the release of novel chemicals. 8: Generation Green New Deal.
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