


(Note that this does not mean reducing emissions by 396 Mt every year. So they need to reduce their emissions by 396 Mt/yr. To get to the magic number of 54% of 2013 emissions, they have to cut emissions down to where they’re emitting 709 megatonnes (Mt, 10 6 metric tonnes) per year. In the most recent year, Japan emitted 1.1 GT of CO2. In 2013, Japan emitted 1.3 gigatonnes (GT, 10 9 metric tonnes) of carbon dioxide (CO2). So once again I take up my quixotic quest to stop countries from emulating lemmings and following each other jumping off the cliff. She asked the minister to confirm what he had said and he did.Ĭlearly, the country is in the best of hands … The interviewer, despite her face mask, was clearly stunned by the revelation that the country’s emission target did not appear to have any scientific basis.
#ALAN WAKE 2 TUNNELS IN COAL MINE TV#
Shinjiro Koizumi, son of former prime minister Junichiro Koizumi, made the comments in an interview with the TV station TBS last weekend. But how was this figure arrived at, environment minister Shinjiro Koizumi was asked? Through a careful analysis of the threat and a realistic assessment of what could be achieved, taking all relevant factors into consideration? Well, er no, according to Koizumi, the number 46 just appeared to him in ‘silhouette’ in a sort of vision. Japan has just raised its target for reducing carbon emissions from 26 per cent to 46 per cent (by 2030 from 2013 levels).
