greenhouse effect coronavirus
Answers
Answer:
what's this bro.....
it's coronavirus... whose genes match with the quantum structure of bats...
how it could be green house effect..... xd
Answer:
After growing at the rate of 1 percent per year in the last decade, daily emissions of heat-trapping carbon dioxide suddenly plunged by as much as 17 percent globally in early April as the world responded to the covid-19 pandemic.
In some countries, the drops were bigger: 30 percent in the United Kingdom, and 32 percent in the United States, as the global response to the spreading coronavirus shut down air travel, emptied streets and slowed the thrum of industrial machinery.
Traffic restrictions accounted for 43 percent of the emissions drop, and reduced power and industrial production also accounted for 43 percent, said scientists with the Global Carbon Project, which conducted the study tracking the day to day changes in emissions, published in Nature Climate Change.
Annual emissions for 2020 will decline by about 4 percent if economic activity and mobility return to normal by mid-June, or by 7 percent if some restrictions remain worldwide until the end of the year, the study projected—in either case, the largest single annual decrease in absolute emissions since the end of World War II