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Greenhouse debt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Greenhouse debt is the measure to which an individual person, incorporated association, business enterprise, government instrumentality or / [and] (per Neb., USA) geographic community exceeds its permitted greenhouse footprint and emits greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming and climate change.[1]

Friends of the Earth and similar organisations put forward the concept to define specifically the environmental harm caused by developed countries' past and present policies.[2] Some governments, at least the Australian Labor leadership, have a tendency to accept such a line of reasoning.[3] The concept, however, makes no sense without a clear numerical value for the permitted greenhouse footprint, which is not easily defined or estimated.

The greenhouse debt assessment thus forms an ecological footprint analysis, but can be used separately. Taken conjointly with a 'water debt' analysis and an ecological impact assessment, greenhouse debt analysis is basic to giving individuals, organisations, governments and communities an understanding of the effects they are having on Gaia, life, and global warming.[citation needed]

Ensuring that the greenhouse debt is zero is essential towards achieving ecologically sustainable development or a sustainable retreat. Any greenhouse debt incurred will contribute to making life harder for future generations of humans and non-human lifeforms.

There are three possible consequences that occur as a result of a greenhouse debt.[citation needed]

  1. Mitigation: finding compensatory ways of reducing the greenhouse debt so its effects are neutralised
  2. Adaptation: finding ways of adjusting to the resulting global warming or climate change
  3. Suffering: having one's quality of life reduced as a result of the consequences

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Mann, Roberta (2007). "Another Day Older and Deeper in Debt: How Tax Incentives Encourage Burning Coal and the Consequences for Global Warming". Pacific McGeorge Global Business & Development Law Journal. 20: 111.
  2. ^ Friends of the Earth International. 2000. Greenhouse debt Archived 2008-06-12 at the Wayback Machine. Link (20):
  3. ^ Hamilton, Clive. We will all pay for Howard's hidden greenhouse debt Archived 2008-06-05 at the Wayback Machine, Crikey, Friday, 14 December 2007: .