Global Warming Or A Myth - Well Who Cares Because They Are Both Wrong When You Read This

It probably says a lot about how far we have come as a society that in 2008, environmental policy across business and government is not an afterthought or a footnote on an agenda to bear in mind. However when you consider that it has taken the erosion of our selfish liberties like how much water we are able to use and how much it is now costing us at the petrol bowser for us to reevaluate our priorities. This combined with the guilt of a movie like an 'Inconvenient Truth' and a Generation Y screaming for change now reach both voting age and positions of influence and financial clout that a true picture can really be seen.


We have now signed The Kyoto Protocol. Many say; "So What" as these two poignant questions still remain; Have we really done anything more than cosmetic change? And are we implementing change at a fast enough pace given our tardy start?


If we examine the technological industry minus the hysterics that often accompany these debates, one could draw the conclusion that little progress is being made at all.

One of our biggest issues is e-waste and we are all guilty of this pleasure fueling this problem. If you ponder a moment the 2000s and your own home circumstances as best as you can recall.

In your household, how many TVs, mobile phones and computers have you owned collectively in this decade? As a rough guide the average modern middle class family averages a mobile phone per person in a home and replaces a phone once every two years. Then houses these days tend to have almost as many computers (particularly if you include gaming consoles like Nintendo Wii or Sony Playstation) as household members and updating these every 3 years or so.

Finally TVs, partly due to the lowering of costs over the past 15 years and the rapid advances in technology, are also being replaced more often than 15 years ago.

In the case of mobile phones and computers particularly, the resale value of an 'old' device (i.e. 2 years for phone, 3 years for computer) is so low and technology advances so rapid that devices themselves become redundant means that in the most part this all becomes E-Waste! So if you extrapolate all those figures across all the households in your neighbourhood, let alone Australia wide or globally, it equates to a lot of sizeable and toxic waste and you may wonder where this all ends up.


Money is a powerful and persuasive tool and like many of our business problems we face today, we outsource it. For the better part of this decade, old computers particularly have been shipped to 3rd world countries like Asia where cheap village labor strips the old parts for usable materials like tin or copper causing both visable and untold damage to the local environment and ultimately the inhabitants. While steps have been made as the decade has progressed to recycle old devices, the energy and pollutant costs in establishing such facilities may outweigh the overall benefit.


What can you do?


Well you can control where you make your purchases as 2006 Greenpeace study showed that Nokia and Dell rated most highly for eliminating toxic waste in their products and having sound e-waste management policies. Surprisingly Apple, often lauded for being innovative and cutting edge, rated near the bottom along with Lenovo (IBMs notebook partner) and Motorola. Australian company 1800 EWaste claims to be the nations biggest computer recycler and come to your place of business or home to pickup old devices. As mentioned with these types of services earlier, you should bear in mind the recycling policies of the company and where and how things are done. Alternatively donating old devices to schools, community centers and groups, charities (both national and international) and even within your family or social groups can put perfectly good devices to continued use.


Finally using resources like Greener Computing, organisations, government bodies and individuals can develop longer term e-waste management solutions so the entire purchase, usage and disposal cycle is following an overall environmental plan to ensure that other important issues like energy efficiency and pollution levels are also accounted for in your decisions.


If nothing else, the most pertinent point to digest from all of this is that, Kyoto means little without individual and collective action. This action as stated does not need to be that much or even that revolutionary and begins with just awareness of the issue. Ask yourself if that .50 per hour that the villagers in Asia are being reportedly paid to sort through your Waste is something you want to live with now and for your children's future?





Related Global Warming International Center Articles

Global Warming Attacking Body Pollution

Global warming is a serious issue and this is not only referring to one country but it deals with seven continents around the world. Climate change is a big issue at present even in the future times. This article is a big help for those who are taking the subjects in Science and Technology, Faculties and students of Biology from other schools and universities.


According to Karin Lindinger, the meaning of global warming is the increase of the average temperature on earth. This definition has something to do with climate change. People around the world must understand that global warming must be stop at all cost in order to show that all things we do that cause our ozone layer in order to receive giant holes.


Readers and viewers must take note that body pollution is a pollution that affects the chemical substances that came from indoor or outdoor pollution, food that they came from chemical substances that could damaged our organs and body systems.

They must understand that even if this is a broad topic, the most important part of this article is how they understand this meaning. So far as I am concern, there is nobody made a real definition of body pollution.

This is how the body pollution attacks. Once a foreign substance enters the body, it has to be detoxified and made water soluble in order to be safely eliminated. The liver and the kidneys are the main organs that is responsible for detoxification while the lungs, skin and intestines also play an important role in the human body system. When the main organ systems have more toxins than they can handle, it is still active or partially deactivated chemicals are stored in the fatty tissues which could possibly affect in the brain and central nervous systems.

After this, it will slowly show some reactive and toxic compounds can be released into the bloodstream, disrupting the systems of the body and causing premature aging and disease.

There is a saying "If there is a problem, there is a solution".


According to the article of Paul Kramer,the solution for fighting body pollution is our guide to use food supplements to optimize our health and protect your body from the environment we live in. Second, is to discover the basic foods that boost the immune system and shield your body from disease. Third, incorporating the latest in stress reduction and exercise techniques in order to maximize their energy levels.


The moral lesson is very basic and simple, protect and love the environment because we are the future in the global society. Government agencies must have an action before its too late to become a disastrous planet.