éviers

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Französisch - Türkisch
lavabolar
Französisch - Englisch
sinks
plural form of sink
Under the Kyoto Protocol, developed countries can include changes in net emissions (calculated as emissions minus removals of CO2) from certain activities in the land-use change and forestry sector Calculating the effects of sinks (growing vegetation tends to absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere) is methodologically complex and still needs to be clarified
Third person singular simple present of to sink
The processes (or places that encompass particular processes) that remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere
Ecosystems, notably forests and oceans, which can remove carbon from the atmosphere by absorbing and storing it, thereby offsetting CO2 emissions The Kyoto Protocol allows certain terrestrial human-induced sinks activities undertaken since 1990 to be counted towards Annex I Parties' emission targets See also LULUCF
- a process that removes greenhouse gases from the atmosphere, either by destroying them through chemical processes or storing them in some other form Carbon dioxide is often stored in ocean water, plants or soils where it can be released at a later time
plural of sink
growing vegetation tends to absorb carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere Calculating the effect of sinks (by land-use change and forestry) is methodologically complex and still needs to be clarified
Interrupted drainage develops on limestone or dolomite beds through the dissolving action of water on the formation Consequently, streams can disappear into subterranean caverns, often not re-emerging until they have traveled underground for a considerable distance The term sink (or sinkhole) or karst drainage is sometimes used to describe this unusual stream pattern
natural systems forests and wetlands, for example that absorb and store greenhouse gases
ecosystems which absorb carbon dioxide naturally through micro-organisms and plants (i e forests and oceans)