Can We Change the Climate?




It may seem hard to believe that people can actually change the Earth's climate. But scientists think that the things people do that send greenhouse gases into the air are making our planet warmer.




A graphic drawing of three items: An airplane flying in the sky, a car driving on a road, and a factory. The caption reads: We need energey to do things like drive a car, fly a plane or make things in factories. But we need to use energey wisely if we want to help slow global warming.

Once, all climate changes occurred naturally. However, during the Industrial Revolution, we began altering our climate and environment through agricultural and industrial practices. The Industrial Revolution was a time when people began using machines to make life easier. It started more than 200 years ago and changed the way humans live. Before the Industrial Revolution, human activity released very few gases into the atmosphere, but now through population growth, fossil fuel burning, and deforestation, we are affecting the mixture of gases in the atmosphere.




Since the Industrial Revolution, the need for energy to run machines has steadily increased. Some energy, like the energy you need to do your homework, comes from the food you eat. But other energy, like the energy that makes cars run and much of the energy used to light and heat our homes, comes from fuels like coal and oil - fossil fuels. Burning these fuels releases greenhouse gases.




When Do You Send Greenhouse Gases into the Air?



Whenever you ...

  • Watch TV
  • Use the Air Conditioner
  • Turn on a Light
  • Use a Hair Dryer
  • Ride in a Car
  • Play a Video Game
  • Listen to a Stereo
  • Wash or Dry Clothes
  • Use a Dish Washer
  • Microwave a Meal

... you are helping to send greenhouse gas into the air.




To perform many of these functions, you need to use electricity. Electricity comes from power plants. Most power plants use coal and oil to make electricity. Burning coal and oil produces greenhouse gases.




A graphic drawing of a freeway and an overpass, both of which have several cars driving on them.

Other things we do send greenhouse gases into the air too;



The trash that we send to landfills produces a greenhouse gas called methane. Methane is also produced by the animals we raise for dairy and meat products and when we take coal out of the ground. Whenever we drive or ride in a car, we are adding greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. And, when factories make the things that we buy and use everyday, they too are sending greenhouse gases into the air.

A graphic drawing of five steps. Each step has a caption. The first drawing depicts some plant life - caption: Plants remove carbon dioxide from the air. The second drawing depicts layers of the earth's ground. Dinosaurs, a volcano and trees are in the distance. Deep in the earth, there is an area of dead plants - caption: When the plants died, they were buried in the earth. The third drawing depicts the same scene the second, but there is a moose where the dinosaur was, a mountain where the volcano was and the area where the dead plants were has darkened - caption: After millions of years, their remains turned into coal and oil. The fourth drawing looks the same as the third except the moose is gone and there is a structure that is drilling into the dark area where the dead plants are buried - caption: People mine the earth for coal and oil, which are called fossil fuels. The fifth graphic depicts a factory with a large CO2 cloud hovering above it - caption: When people burn fossil fuels, they send carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the air.




Much of the information in this section (including text and images) has been sourced from the United States Environmental Protection Agency. Visit the EPA website to learn more.

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