What are the causes and effects of climate change?

2019-10-07 01:05:05

Korea Climate Change Institute and Korea Energy Agency Seoul Regional Energy Climate Change Center

Due to climate change, the Korea Climate Change Institute and the Korea Energy Agency's Seoul Regional Energy Climate Change Center are also conducting research on climate change.

Korea Institute for Climate Change researches the causes of climate change and studies countermeasures.

The Korea Energy Agency's Seoul Regional Energy Climate Change Center supports work related to climate change agreements and supports renewable energy supply projects.

The Climate Change Convention is an international agreement aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions in order to prevent disasters caused by global warming.

The formal name is the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

The Paris Climate Change Convention is an international agreement signed on December 12, 2015 in Paris, France to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions.

Long-term climate change in a given area.

Today, the destruction and pollution of the global environment is the leading cause of climate change.

The biggest problem is the global warming, which is the rise of global temperature.

The flow of air changes and causes global abnormal climate changes (floods, droughts, El Nino, La Niña, etc.), which have a major impact on the global ecosystem.

Responses and countermeasures are also essential.

Response to climate change refers to activities aimed at reducing global warming and its consequences.

As a countermeasure against climate change, there are measures to reduce carbon emission rights by reducing greenhouse gas emissions by country.

There exists an international convention aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions in order to prevent disasters caused by global warming.

Our country joined the 47th climate change convention in December 1993.

The Paris Climate Change Convention was signed on December 12, 2015 in Paris, France to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions, with the goal of keeping the global average temperature rise significantly below 2 degrees.