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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This four page paper presents a three-step plan for addressing global environmental problems. These steps are 1. the identification and use of alternative energy sources, 2. an emphasis on self-sustainability in terms of food production, and 3. recycling. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPenvActions.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
is being threatened on many fronts. Our petroleum dependent lifestyles are the basis for many of those threats. The emission of wastes products from our consumption of fossil
fuel makes acid rain and global warming very real hazards, the effects of which we are currently experiencing and which will continue to grow in their impact (Bode, 2006).
Additional effects of fossil fuel dependence are even more straightforward. The ecological complexity of natural areas which have been mined for their fossil fuels is no more. Mining
does irreparable damages to the worlds critical ecosystem. Obviously, our nations, and indeed the worlds, dependence on fossil fuel is a dependence which has cost us much both economically
and ecologically. Fossil fuels are a finite resource, once they are gone they are gone. We must identify alternative energy sources and make a transition towards those sources
if our society and some remnant of the worlds natural environment are to survive. Additional global impacts that must be addressed include the loss of valuable ecosystems and the
industrial and domestic impacts of our consumer lifestyle choices. The first step that must be taken in the remediation of global impacts is
the move towards alternative energy forms such as solar, wind, and geothermal. Many of these energy forms have, in fact, been in use for centuries. Wind energy, for
example, is one of the oldest forms of energy. Windmills have been employed to grind grain, for example, for over one thousand years (Flavin, 1999). During medieval times
wind energy provided an alternative to those that, because of control of valuable waterways by feudal lords, did not have access to more traditional energy sources such as that used
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