Microsoft ® PowerPoint Presentation to accompany Chapter 18 Global Climate Change Viewing recommendations for Windows: Use the Arial TrueType font and set your screen area to at least 800 by 600 pixels with Colors set to Hi-Color (16 bit). Viewing recommendations for Macintosh: Use the Arial TrueType font and set your monitor resolution to at
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Microsoft ® PowerPoint Presentation to accompany Chapter 18 Global Climate Change Viewing recommendations for Windows: Use the Arial TrueType font and.
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Microsoft® PowerPoint Presentation to accompany
Chapter 18Global Climate Change
Viewing recommendations for Windows: Use the Arial TrueType font and set your screen area to at least 800 by 600 pixels with Colors set to Hi-Color (16 bit).
Viewing recommendations for Macintosh: Use the Arial TrueType font and set your monitor resolution to at least 800 by 600 pixels with Color Depth set to thousands of colors.
Figure 18-1: Carbon Emissions Due to Fossil Fuel Consumption, 1860–1995
Source: Adapted from Manne and Richels, Buying Greenhouse Insurance: The Economic Costs of CO2 Emission Limits. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1994. Updated with data only from Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center (CDIAC), http://cdiac.esd.ornl.gov/. Courtesy of CDIAC.
Source: Adapted from The Economist, Nov. 18-24, 2000; data from the Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center (CDAIC), http://cdiac.csd.esd.ornl.gov/.
Figure 18-6: Long-Term Costs and Benefits of Abating Global Climate Change
Source: Adapted from William R. Cline, The Economics of Global Warming, Washington D.C.: Institute for International Economics, 1992. Reprinted by permission of Institute for International Economics.
Figure 18-9: United States Greenhouse Gas Emissions, 1990–2010
Source: Percentage growth and proposed emissions cuts cited in “American Demands Something for Nothing, But the World Needs an End to its Hot Air,” The Independent (London), November 27, 2000.