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economy
drkedar_karki@yahoo.com
Abstrect:
Key Word:
Background:
Nuclear Power, or, the proposed strategies of Carbon capture and storage(CCS)
have been proposed as the primary means to achieve a LCE while continuing to
exploit non-renewable resources; there is concern, however, with the matter of
spent-nuclear-fuel storage, and the uncertainty of costs and time needed to
successfully implement CCS worldwide and with guarantees that the stored
emissions will not leak into the biosphere. Alternatively, many have proposed
renewable energy should be the main basis of a LCE, but, they have their
associated problems of high-cost and inefficiency; this is changing, however,
since investment and production have been growing significantly in recent
times [2]. Furthermore, regardless of the effect to the biosphere by GHG
emissions, the growing issue of peak oil may also be reason enough for a
transition to an LCE.
The aim of a LCE is to integrate all aspects of itself from its manufacturing,
agriculture, transportation and power-generation etc. around technologies that
produce energy and materials with little GHG emission; and thus, around
populations, buildings, machines and devices which use those energies and
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materials efficiently, and, dispose of or recycle its wastes so as to have a
minimal output of GHGs. Furthermore, it has been proposed that to make the
transition to an LCE economically viable we would have to attribute a cost(per
unit output) to GHGs through means such as emissions trading and/or a carbon
tax.
Primary Sector
Also, most of the agricultural facilities in the developed world are mechanized
due to rural electrification. Rural electrification has produced significant
productivity gains, but it also uses a lot of energy. For this and other reasons
(such as transport costs) in the low-carbon, rural areas will rely heavily on
locally and renewably produced electricity.
Crops
Different crops require different amounts of energy input. For example,
glasshouse crops, irrigated crops, and orchards require a lot of energy to
maintain, while row crops and field crops don’t need as much maintenance.
Those glasshouse and irrigated crops that do exist will incorporate the
following improvements: [4]
Glasshouse crops
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Irrigated arable crops
Livestock
Livestock operations can also use a lot of energy depending on how they are
run. Feed lots use animal feed made from corn, soybeans, and other crops.
Energy must be expended to produce these crops, process and transport them.
Free-range animals find their own vegetation to feed on. The farmer may
expend energy to take care of that vegetation, but not nearly as much as the
farmer who grows cereal and oil-seed crops.
Many livestock operations currently use a lot of energy to water their livestock.
In the low-carbon economy, such operations will use more water conservation
methods such as rainwater collection, water cisterns, etc and they will also
pump/distribute that water with on-site renewable energy sources (most likely
wind and solar).
Irrigated Dairy
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Internationally, the most prominent early step in the direction of a low-carbon
economy was the signing of the Kyoto Protocol, which came into force on
February 16, 2005, under which most industrialized countries committed to
reduce their carbon emissions.[15][16] Importantly, all member nations of the
Organization for Economic except the United States have ratified the
protocol.
Australia
China
In China, the city of Dongtan is to be built to be produce zero net greenhouse
gas emissions.[6]
Europe,Iceland
United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, a draft Climate Change Bill outlining a framework for
the transition to a low-carbon economy was published on March 13, 2007. This
legislation would require a 60% cut in the UK's carbon emissions by 2050
(compared to 1990 levels), with an intermediate target of between 26% and
32% by 2020.[10] If approved, the UK would likely become the first country to set
such a long-range and significant carbon reduction target into law.[11]
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Mitigation in developing countries:
Population Control
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References
6. Arup unveils plans for world’s first sustainable city in Dongtan, China.
Arup (2005-08-24). Retrieved on 2007-04-26. Retrieved on 2008-06-10
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7. Gross energy consumption by source 1987–2005, Statistics Iceland,
accessed 2007-05-14 Retrieved on 2008-06-10
10. New Bill and strategy lay foundations for tackling climate change.
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (2007-03-13).
Retrieved on 2008-06-10
12. Prototype Carbon Fund from the World Bank Carbon Finance Unit
Retrieved on 2008-06-10
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13. Methane to Markets Partnership. USAID.gov. Retrieved on 2008-06-10
15. Population and Global Warming Factsheet from Sierra Club Retrieved on
2008-06-10
16. Population and Global Warming National Wild Life Federation Retrieved
on 2008-06-10
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19. To the point of farce: a martian view of the hardinian taboo—the silence
that surrounds population control Maurice King, Charles Elliott BMJ
Retrieved on 2008-06-10
20. Who is Heating Up the Planet? A Closer Look at Population and Global
Warming from Sierra Club Retrieved on 2008-06-10
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