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There are 16 essays on Global warming.

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Student Essays on Global warming
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Essay Grade: 92%
Strategies Attempting to Deal with Global Warming
2,349 words, approx. 8 pages
This essay evaluates the effectiveness of current strategies designed to deal with global warming. It address why some people believe it is impossible to reach international agreement on the issue.
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Essay Grade: 86%
Global Warming: Unveiling the Truth
2,083 words, approx. 7 pages
Not only is global warming harming species of life such as polar bears around the poles, but throughout the entire planet. Scientists studying a deteriorating species of colorful frogs in Central and South America say global warming has joined with a spreading fungus that is creating vast areas of once plentiful living conditions of misty mountainsides to extinction.
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Essay Grade: 87%
The Causes of Global Warming and Solutions to This Problem
1,381 words, approx. 5 pages
Evaluates the causes and impacts of global warming as well as offers solutions to correct this problem.
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Essay Grade: 88%
Bill McKibben's "Driving Global Warming"
1,216 words, approx. 4 pages
A summary and critique of Bill McKibben's 2001 article "Driving Global Warming," in which he argued that the sport utility vehicle contributes more to global warming than any other automobile.
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Essay Grade: 92%
Global Warming: Climates Are Changing
1,111 words, approx. 4 pages
This essay/research paper describes the ozone layer and it's destruction, the resultant warming of the Earth, it's effects on the ecosystem, and climatic changes.
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Essay Grade: 86%
The Effects of Global Warming on Ontario
1,050 words, approx. 4 pages
Explores the risks of global warming and what it means for Ontarians. Describes the alteration in the Earth's atmosphere and climate and examines its effects the people and environment of the Great Lakes region.
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Essay Grade: 88%
Effects of Global Warming on Agriculture
1,047 words, approx. 4 pages
Few scientists anymore deny that global warming is occuring, but we may be able to adjust to this new climate with only modest changes in lifestyle. There are two schools of thought on whether agriculture will be hurt or helped by increased temperatures and rainfall. Some crops will likely thrive while others will not.
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Essay Grade: 83%
Knowing Our Planet's Worth
916 words, approx. 3 pages
This essay addresses the issue of global warming by offering several suggestions to help reduce the amount of greenhouse emissions.
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Essay Grade: 83%
The Importance of Conservation
898 words, approx. 3 pages
Discusses the environmental issue of global warming. Encourages conservation and environmental activism.
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Essay Grade: 83%
GLobal Warming: Under Fire
892 words, approx. 3 pages
Temperature, time has told us, is a fickle thing-prone to many variables. One day man may be able to calculate where our spinning home in the universe is going, what we can expect: whether a frozen winter dusk is our future or a blazing fiery sahara or an unaltered static terrain, but that time is not today, for now we are blinded by the lights of too many conflicting truths.
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Essay Grade: 78%
Why Bush Should Do Something about Global Warming
884 words, approx. 3 pages
The degree of climate change on Earth has shown to be disastrous even in the last two years alone, with increased flooding in Europe, droughts in Africa, the catastropic tsunami in Asia, and the hurricanes in the Southern United States. Yet, in 2001 America walked out of the Kyoto Protocol summit which was organized to decrease worldwide energy use and emission of poisonous gases. As the United States is the biggest consumer of energy in the world, it should also be a forerunner on global warming issues.
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Essay Grade: 83%
Advantages and Disadvantages of Melting Polar Ice Caps
807 words, approx. 3 pages
As the polar ice caps melt, the climate change will produce advantages and disadvantages. The Artic will be more open to exploring for natural resources, but global warming is dangerous for the Earth.
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Essay Grade: 83%
The Domino Effect of Global Warming
767 words, approx. 3 pages
Global warming can be compared to dominos in that both cause a chain reaction. Carbon dioxide can be considered the first domino, producing a blanket-like effect over the atmosphere. This can lead to the melting of polar ice and permafrost, followed by a rise in sea level that could in turn result in coastal flooding and the engulfing of many major cities.
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Essay Grade: 81%
James Hansen Theory on Global Warming
632 words, approx. 2 pages
Popularly known as global warming, the theory of climate change has aroused intense controversy regarding the extent to which human activities affect global temperatures and weather patterns. James Hansen, a researcher from NASA announced with confidence that global warming had arrived.
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Essay Grade: 84%
Global Warming: Causes and Effects
619 words, approx. 2 pages
The causes and effects of Global Warming
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Essay Grade: 86%
Deforestation and Global Warming
504 words, approx. 2 pages
Essay consists of a discussion of the advantages and disadvantages of global warming.

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