are there environmental, economical, or conservation problems that have to do with the sun? if so, what?Any environmental, economical, or conservation problems with the sun?Not really. The sun has been mostly stable and constant for many hundreds of millions of years, and will continue so for hundreds of millions of years into the future.
Global warming deniers try to suggest that changes in the Sun are responsible for global warming, but that's nonsense.Any environmental, economical, or conservation problems with the sun?The Sun's energy, stored by plants (primary producers) during photosynthesis, passes through the food chain to other organisms to ultimately power all living processes. Since the industrial revolution the concentrated energy of the Sun stored in fossilised plants as fossil fuels has been a major driver of technology which, in turn, has been the source of both economic and political power. In 2007 climate scientists of the IPCC concluded that there was at least a 90% probability that atmospheric increase in CO2 was human-induced, mostly as a result of fossil fuel emissions but, to a lesser extent from changes in land use. Stabilising the world’s climate will require high income countries to reduce their emissions by 60-90% over 2006 levels by 2050 which should hold CO2 levels at 450-650 ppm from current levels of about 380 ppm. Above this level and temperatures could rise by more than 2 °C (36 °F) to produce “catastrophic” climate change. Reduction of current CO2 levels must be achieved against a background of global population increase and developing countries aspiring to energy-intensive high consumption Western lifestyles.Any environmental, economical, or conservation problems with the sun?Not yet.Any environmental, economical, or conservation problems with the sun?
Well there is the number one big problem with the Sun:
1.The Sun causes Global Warming. The Sun is the number one reason the Earth gets too hot.
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