A crooked industry in China has been releasing ozone-depleting chemicals into Earth's atmosphere for years. Now,Cuckold movies many of the culprits have been exposed.
CFC-11, an illegal chemical used to make foam insulation used in homes and buildings, has been banned globally for decades. But scientists spotted an uptick in the chemical's abundance in the air since 2012, meaning its overall decline has slowed. Researchers concluded in May that there must be a new source of these pollutants.
Exactly who was annually spewing some 14,000 thousand tons of a chemical that erodes the ozone layer — which keeps life on Earth from getting irradiated by the sun — wasn't known.
SEE ALSO: A landmark climate change ruling could go up in smoke after Justice Kennedy retiresIndependent investigators, like the Washington D.C.-based Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA), started snooping around.
"We were immediately on the trail," Avipsa Mahapatra, a climate analyst at the EIA, said in an interview.
"It is a massive environmental crime that’s occurring," she added.
Using undercover sources to film and record at factories in China, the organization confirmed that 18 factories across the country admitted to using CFC-11. The organization released their full report on July 8.
"What was most egregious to us wasn't only that they knew it was illegal, but they said a majority of the market were using it as well," said Mahapatra, who happened to be speaking from an international meeting in Vienna, Austria, on these very ozone-depleting chemicals.
As of May, scientists suspected the source of CFC-11 to be somewhere in southeastern Asia. "But we weren't able to pinpoint it more precisely," said National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration scientist Steve Montzka, who led the May study identifying the new CFC emissions, in an interview.
The EIA's report follows a June investigative story by the New York Times,which showed that Chinese factories were knowingly using the illegal chemical, in large part because it's cheaper than the legal — and less environmentally impactful — alternative.
"The benefits far outweigh the risks was the bottom line," said Mahapatra of these companies' choice to use the banned substance. They used it for years without their activity being observed by atmospheric scientists. But eventually, said Motzka, scientists "were able to raise a flag."
The Chinese government itself is largely responsible for putting a cap on the problem.
China, like every other nation in the world, has signed the Montreal Protocol, which in 1987 sought to phase out the use of ozone-depleting chemicals. This international treaty is widely viewed as one of the most successful international agreements ever, as the use of the chemicals has incrementally dropped, and the ozone layer has begun to mend.
The Montreal Protocol has a scientific body that can study the ozone layer, but it doesn't have a police force meant to stop illegal chemical emitters. That's up to each nation to enforce.
"It is illegal by Chinese law to produce and use these chemicals," said Mahapatra.
In this case, these companies appear to have deceived their own nation. As the EIA report showed, one company had even painted the side of its building to declare it as a "farming plantation."
"I would say these are rogue companies, and they understand it’s an illegal gas," said Mahapatra. "They have engineered a means to circumvent Chinese regulations."
"This environmental crime demands decisive action"
To stop the emitters, the Chinese government"can start with an immediate clampdown of the companies we identified," said Mahapatra.
Luckily, the Chinese government already has a head start. The EIA provided an earlier copy of the report directly to them before releasing it publicly. The penalties for flouting the Montreal treaty, including seizures and arrests, should be severe enough to discourage future violations, said Mahapatra.
NOAA's Montzka cautions that although the EIA's relatively quick turnaround is impressive, it might not explain all the new sources of CFC pollutants recently observed. Even so, cutting off these emissions will likely make a meaningful difference.
"If the emissions were to persist, we could imagine the ozone recovery might be delayed by a decade or so," said Montzka.
Already, the ozone layer's recovery will take decades. Earlier this year, NASA scientists estimated it could take until 2060, 2080, or longer.
And illegal polluting certainly won't help any.
"This is not naivete here," said Mahapatra. "It's widespread and pervasive. This environmental crime demands decisive action."
iOS 17.2 boosts iPhone 15 Pro cameras and brings Qi2 wireless charging to older iPhonesMrBeast sued his restaurant partner for $10 million. They're suing him back for $100 million.At Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s Hundredth Birthday Party by Nina SparlingWhy Does This Feel So Bad? by Jenny OdellSo What If Lincoln Was Gay? by Louis BayardMrBeast's new video breaks YouTube recordStaff Picks: Sapphics, Scandals, and Skies by The Paris ReviewThe best part of 'The Holiday' is Jack Black flirting in a video storeBeyond the Narrative Arc by Jane AlisonNothing Is Like Anything Else: On Amy Hempel by Alice BlackhurstThe BookTok controversy with Seattle Kraken hockey player Alex Wennberg, explainedWhite People Must Save Themselves from Whiteness by Venita BlackburnStaff Picks: Sapphics, Scandals, and Skies by The Paris ReviewI have the Ray5 most overrated tech features of 2023.Balzac and the Reassembly of France by Jérôme DavidThe Stupid Classics Book Club by Elisa GabbertThe Corner of ‘MacDoodle St.’ and Memory Ln.Staff Picks: Moscow, Misunderstandings, and Money Mark by The Paris ReviewDeborah Eisenberg’s Life in Comics by Liana Finck Apple is now shipping iPhone X orders in two to four business days A fake Ethereum wallet lurks in Apple's App Store Apple promotes iPhone X on Youtube with FaceID, Portrait Lighting ads Sirius XM faces boycott from celebrities over Steve Bannon's return Programmer finds keylogger on hundreds of HP computer models The secret meaning behind the NBA's esports league logo Alcoholic gift ideas that say, 'Your political opinions are worth hearing' Test audiences didn't think 'The Disaster Artist' was based on truth You can finally stream 4K videos on Xbox One consoles Facebook responds to criticism of network 'destroying how society works' Researchers to listen for signs of life from interstellar asteroid 9 smartphone innovations from Qualcomm's Snapdragon 845 chip Saudi Arabia will open cinemas for the first time in 35 years Global warming is pushing the Arctic into 'unprecedented' era Oh man, oh geez, 'Rick and Morty' gets an Avengers Billie Lourd pays tribute to Carrie Fisher at 'Last Jedi' premiere Twitter makes tweetstorms and long threads an official part of its app Elon Musk's Boring Company sold $600,000 worth of hats Nintendo reportedly in talks with GungHo to make more mobile games Photos and video show ongoing severity of California wildfires
1.1982s , 10134.28125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Cuckold movies】,Unobstructed Information Network