
1. Physical Damages
1.1. Deforestation
1.1.1. Trees help to direct the environment by engrossing CO2 from the atmosphere. At the point when they're chopped down, that valuable impact is lost and the carbon stored in the tprees is spread into the environment, adding to the greenhouse effect.
1.1.2. Global Warming
1.2. Nitrogen Containing Fertilizers
1.2.1. The fertilizers produce nitrous oxide emissions.
2. Global Phenomenons
2.1. An Increase in Temperature & Extreme Weather
2.1.1. Outrageous climate occasions are more typical in various countries with changing patterns of being more aggressive, intense, and with more energy. This implies more storms, floods, tornadoes, and droughts.
2.1.2. Climate
2.1.3. Hurricanes
2.2. Weather
2.2.1. Migration
2.3. Sea level rise & Polar Ice caps melting
2.3.1. What's more, sealevels won't just increase, they'll likewise be confronting ecological difficulties of oceanic acidification and deoxygenation.
2.4. Ocean Acidification
2.4.1. Ocean Currents
2.5. Loss of Snow Pack
2.5.1. Water Supply
2.6. Climate Forcing
2.6.1. Feedback: a whole series of environmental changes take place, either suppressing the change, or exaggerating the initial change
2.7. Thermal Expansion
2.7.1. Latent Heats of Water
3. Overpopulated
3.1. Transportation
3.1.1. Conventional
3.1.1.1. SIngle drivers
3.1.2. Alternative
3.1.2.1. Commute
3.1.2.1.1. Bus
3.1.2.1.2. Electric car
3.1.2.1.3. Train
3.1.2.1.4. Walk
3.1.2.1.5. Bicycle
4. Energy sources
4.1. Conventional
4.1.1. Fossil fuel
4.1.1.1. Directly correlated to ocean acidification. This is because fossil fuels release carbon dioxide, which is correlated with a decrease in ocean pH.
4.1.1.2. Petroleum
4.1.1.3. Coal
4.1.1.4. Oil
4.1.1.5. Natural Gas
4.1.2. nuclear
4.2. Alternatives
4.2.1. Solar energy
4.2.2. Wind energy
4.2.3. Hydroelectric