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GHG

Greenhouse gases (GHGs) are atmospheric constituents that absorb infrared radiation and trap heat, reinforcing the natural greenhouse effect and contributing to climate change. The major anthropogenic GHGs are carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), and fluorinated gases, including HFCs, PFCs, and SF6. Water vapor is the most abundant greenhouse gas, but its concentration is largely controlled by temperature and climate feedbacks rather than direct emissions, so it is treated differently in many inventories.

Human activities increase GHG concentrations by burning fossil fuels (coal, oil, gas) for energy and transport;

Emissions are typically reported in terms of CO2 equivalents (CO2e), using a metric such as Global Warming

International frameworks, including the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Paris Agreement,

industrial
processes;
deforestation
and
other
land-use
changes;
agricultural
practices;
and
waste
management.
Natural
sources
and
sinks
also
influence
levels,
but
the
current
atmospheric
growth
is
driven
predominantly
by
human
activities.
Potential
(GWP)
to
compare
the
climate
impact
of
different
gases
over
a
chosen
time
horizon
(commonly
100
years).
Atmospheric
lifetimes
vary:
CO2
can
persist
for
centuries,
methane
about
a
decade
to
a
few
decades,
nitrous
oxide
about
a
century,
and
fluorinated
gases
for
varying
timescales
from
years
to
millennia.
address
GHG
reporting
and
reductions.
Mitigation
strategies
focus
on
decarbonizing
energy
supply,
improving
energy
efficiency,
expanding
renewable
energy,
deploying
methane
capture
and
reuse,
changing
agricultural
practices,
protecting
and
expanding
forests,
and
implementing
carbon
pricing
and
refrigerant
management.