sökmotorvänlig webbdesign
Här kan du lägga till din länk om du har en webplats som handlar om sökmotorvänlig webbdesign
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sökmotorvänlig,
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Alla dessa ställen kan du lägga till din url genoom att dela med dig av dina "bokmärken"
Del.icio.us Digg
Facebook Furl
StumbleUpon Yahoo MyWeb
Newsvine Reddit
Technorati Live Bookmarks
Yahoo Bookmarks Twitter
Ask myAOL
Slashdot Fark
Simpy Propeller
RawSugar Blogmarks
Spurl LinkaGoGo
Mister Wong Wink
Backflip Magnolia
Diigo Blue Dot
Segnalo Netvouz
Tailrank BlinkList
DropJack Feed Me Links
Alla dessa ställen kan du lägga till din url genoom att dela med dig av dina "bokmärken"
Nr 1 på google
Sökmotorvänlig webbdesign som gör dig till nr 1 på google. Internetmarknadsföring när den är som bäst. Vi redovisar på vår pixel reklam sida hur många träffar varje annons (länk) får. Samtidigt som google uppskattar och uppgraderar placeringen på din webbplats. Varför inte prova att annonsera eller om du har en pagerank 3 site göra ett länkbyte. Du som ej har fårr pagerank än kan annonsera med banner för att få en gratis annons plats.
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Google,
internetmarknadsföring,
pixel. ads. add,
pixelreklam,
reklam
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Internetmarknadsföring
Vill du synas med både annons och länk. Prova då våran pixel reklam site. Vi har tävlat med siten i seovm. När tävlingen var över tyckte jag att det skulle vara bra att göra om den till en pixel reklam site. När du köper pixlar hos oss så gör du samtidigt en insats för miljön. Välkommen att titta in.
Globalwarming awareness2007
Eftersom den förra ligger nere så titta på denna lista i stället. Denna verkar vara mer komplett också..
Globalwarming awareness2007
Globalwarming awareness2007
2007 is the year for Globalwarming awareness2007 There is no more important cause than the call to action to save our planet We are all contributors to global warming and we all need to be part of the solution here are something you can do to help stop globalwarming Plant a tree of Garden. native plants are best as they will need less chemicals and water to maintain Conserve Using less amounts of gasoline, coal and oil buy a hybrid and get rid of the big SUV Use and buy energy-efficient home appliances and lighting which also helps you save money Recycle Reuse and Reduce use of products and resources Switch to double pane windows to reduce the use of your heater and air conditioner What is Global Warming? The Earth as ecosystem is changing very fast, attributable in great part by the effects of man and globalization. More and more carbon dioxide is being added to the atmosphere everyday than there has been in the past 600,000 years. Most of this comes from Cars and Trucks This carbon dioxide stays in the atmosphere and acts like a blanket, holding in the heat and is causing ‘globalwarming.’ The reason life exist on earth is because the earth naturally traps just enough heat in the atmosphere to keep the temperature within a very narrow range - this creates the conditions that give us breathable air, clean water, and the weather we depend on to survive. Man has begun to tip this balance. We have overloaded the atmosphere with heat-trapping gasses from our cars and factories and power plants. If we don't start fixing this problem soon, we’re in for devastating changes to our natural environment. We will experience extreme temperatures changes, rises in sea levels, and storms of unimaginable destruction. Recently, alarming events that are consistent with scientific predictions about the effects of globalwarming have become more and more commonplace. globalwarming globalwarming awareness2007 SEO World Championship rule Your domain must be registered the same day or after January the 15th 2007 you must display a banner or link to seoworldchampionship.com You must follow Google Webmaters Guidelines
2007 is the year for Globalwarming awareness2007 There is no more important cause than the call to action to save our planet We are all contributors to global warming and we all need to be part of the solution here are something you can do to help stop globalwarming Plant a tree of Garden. native plants are best as they will need less chemicals and water to maintain Conserve Using less amounts of gasoline, coal and oil buy a hybrid and get rid of the big SUV Use and buy energy-efficient home appliances and lighting which also helps you save money Recycle Reuse and Reduce use of products and resources Switch to double pane windows to reduce the use of your heater and air conditioner What is Global Warming? The Earth as ecosystem is changing very fast, attributable in great part by the effects of man and globalization. More and more carbon dioxide is being added to the atmosphere everyday than there has been in the past 600,000 years. Most of this comes from Cars and Trucks This carbon dioxide stays in the atmosphere and acts like a blanket, holding in the heat and is causing ‘globalwarming.’ The reason life exist on earth is because the earth naturally traps just enough heat in the atmosphere to keep the temperature within a very narrow range - this creates the conditions that give us breathable air, clean water, and the weather we depend on to survive. Man has begun to tip this balance. We have overloaded the atmosphere with heat-trapping gasses from our cars and factories and power plants. If we don't start fixing this problem soon, we’re in for devastating changes to our natural environment. We will experience extreme temperatures changes, rises in sea levels, and storms of unimaginable destruction. Recently, alarming events that are consistent with scientific predictions about the effects of globalwarming have become more and more commonplace. globalwarming globalwarming awareness2007 SEO World Championship rule Your domain must be registered the same day or after January the 15th 2007 you must display a banner or link to seoworldchampionship.com You must follow Google Webmaters Guidelines
Globalwarming awareness2007
Basic Information
Climate Change or Global Warming?
The term climate change is often used interchangeably with the term global warming, but according to the National Academy of Sciences, “the phrase ‘climate change’ is growing in preferred use to ‘global warming’ because it helps convey that there are [other] changes in addition to rising temperatures.”
Climate change refers to any significant change in measures of climate (such as temperature, precipitation, or wind) lasting for an extended period (decades or longer). Climate change may result from:
natural factors, such as changes in the sun’s intensity or slow changes in the Earth’s orbit around the sun;
natural processes within the climate system (e.g. changes in ocean circulation);
human activities that change the atmosphere’s composition (e.g. through burning fossil fuels) and the land surface (e.g. deforestation, reforestation, urbanization, desertification, etc.)
Global warming is an average increase in the temperature of the atmosphere near the Earth’s surface and in the troposphere, which can contribute to changes in global climate patterns. Global warming can occur from a variety of causes, both natural and human induced. In common usage, “global warming” often refers to the warming that can occur as a result of increased emissions of greenhouse gases from human activities.
The Earth’s climate has changed many times during the planet’s history, with events ranging from ice ages to long periods of warmth. Historically, natural factors such as volcanic eruptions, changes in the Earth’s orbit, and the amount of energy released from the Sun have affected the Earth’s climate. Beginning late in the 18th century, human activities associated with the Industrial Revolution have also changed the composition of the atmosphere and therefore likely are influencing the Earth’s climate.
The EPA climate change Web site has four main sections on climate change issues and another section on “What You Can Do” to reduce your contribution.
Science U.S. Climate Policy Greenhouse Gas Emissions Health and Environmental Effects What You Can Do
Science
For over the past 200 years, the burning of fossil fuels, such as coal and oil, and deforestation have caused the concentrations of heat-trapping “greenhouse gases” to increase significantly in our atmosphere. These gases prevent heat from escaping to space, somewhat like the glass panels of a greenhouse.
Greenhouse gases are necessary to life as we know it, because they keep the planet’s surface warmer than it otherwise would be. But, as the concentrations of these gases continue to increase in the atmosphere, the Earth’s temperature is climbing above past levels. According to NOAA and NASA data, the Earth’s average surface temperature has increased by about 1.2 to 1.4ºF since 1900. The warmest global average temperatures on record have all occurred within the past 15 years, with the warmest two years being 1998 and 2005. Most of the warming in recent decades is likely the result of human activities. Other aspects of the climate are also changing such as rainfall patterns, snow and ice cover, and sea level.
If greenhouse gases continue to increase, climate models predict that the average temperature at the Earth’s surface could increase from 2.5 to 10.4ºF above 1990 levels by the end of this century. Scientists are certain that human activities are changing the composition of the atmosphere, and that increasing the concentration of greenhouse gases will change the planet’s climate. But they are not sure by how much it will change, at what rate it will change, or what the exact effects will be. See the Science and Health and Environmental Effects sections of this site for more detail.
Top of Page
U.S. Climate Policy
The United States government has established a comprehensive policy to address climate change. This policy has three basic components:
Slowing the growth of emissions
Strengthening science, technology and institutions
Enhancing international cooperation
To implement its climate policy, the Federal government is using voluntary and incentive-based programs to reduce emissions and has established programs to promote climate technology and science. This strategy incorporates know-how from many federal agencies and harnesses the power of the private sector.
In February 2002, the United States announced a comprehensive strategy to reduce the greenhouse gas intensity of the American economy by 18 percent over the 10-year period from 2002 to 2012. Greenhouse gas intensity is a measurement of greenhouse gas emissions per unit of economic activity. Meeting this commitment will prevent the release of more than 100 million metric tons of carbon-equivalent emissions to the atmosphere (annually) by 2012 and more than 500 million metric tons (cumulatively) between 2002 and 2012.
EPA plays a significant role in helping the Federal government reach the United States’ intensity goal. EPA has many current and near-term initiatives that encourage voluntary reductions from a variety of stakeholders. Initiatives, such as ENERGY STAR, Climate Leaders, and our Methane Voluntary Programs, encourage emission reductions from large corporations, consumers, industrial and commercial buildings, and many major industrial sectors. For details on these and other initiatives as well as other aspects of U.S. policy, visit the U.S. Climate Policy section of the site.
Top of page
Greenhouse Gas Emissions
In the U.S., our energy-related activities account for three-quarters of our human-generated greenhouse gas emissions, mostly in the form of carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels. More than half the energy-related emissions come from large stationary sources such as power plants, while about a third comes from transportation. Industrial processes (such as the production of cement, steel, and aluminum), agriculture, forestry, other land use, and waste management are also important sources of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States.
For a better understanding of where greenhouse gas emissions come from, governments at the federal, state and local levels prepare emissions inventories, which track emissions from various parts of the economy such as transportation, electricity production, industry, agriculture, forestry, and other sectors. EPA publishes the official national inventory of US greenhouse gas emissions, and the latest greenhouse gas inventory shows that in 2004 the U.S. emitted over 7 billon metric tons of greenhouse gases (a million metric tons of CO2 equivalents (MMTCO2e) is roughly equal to the annual GHG emissions of an average U.S. power plant.) Visit the Emissions section of this site to learn more.
Top of page
Health and Environmental Effects
Climate change affects people, plants, and animals. Scientists are working to better understand future climate change and how the effects will vary by region and over time.
Scientists have observed that some changes are already occurring. Observed effects include sea level rise, shrinking glaciers, changes in the range and distribution of plants and animals, trees blooming earlier, lengthening of growing seasons, ice on rivers and lakes freezing later and breaking up earlier, and thawing of permafrost. Another key issue being studied is how societies and the Earth’s environment will adapt to or cope with climate change.
In the United States, scientists believe that most areas will to continue to warm, although some will likely warm more than others. It remains very difficult to predict which parts of the country will become wetter or drier, but scientists generally expect increased precipitation and evaporation, and drier soil in the middle parts of the country. Northern regions such as Alaska are expected to experience the most warming. In fact, Alaska has been experiencing significant changes in climate in recent years that may be at least partly related to human caused global climate change.
Human health can be affected directly and indirectly by climate change in part through extreme periods of heat and cold, storms, and climate-sensitive diseases such as malaria, and smog episodes. For more information on these and other environmental effects, please visit the Health and Environmental Effects section of this site.
Top of page
What You Can Do
Greenhouse gases are emitted as a result of the energy we use by driving and using electricity and through other activities that support our quality of life like growing food and raising livestock. Greenhouse gas emissions can be minimized through simple measures like changing light bulbs in your home and properly inflating your tires to improve your car’s fuel economy. The What You Can Do section of the climate change site identifies 30 action steps that individuals can take to decrease greenhouse gas emissions, increase the nation’s energy independence and also save money.
State and local governments and businesses play an important role in meeting the national goal of reducing greenhouse gas intensity by 18 percent by 2012. For example, major corporations, states and local organizations are taking action through participation in a wide range of EPA and other federal voluntary programs.
You can start by assessing your own contribution to the problem, by using EPA’s personal greenhouse gas emissions calculator to estimate your household’s annual emissions. Once you know about how much you emit, you use the tool to see how simple steps you take at home, at the office, on the road, and at school can reduce your emissions. Visit the What You Can Do section of this site to learn more.
Climate Change or Global Warming?
The term climate change is often used interchangeably with the term global warming, but according to the National Academy of Sciences, “the phrase ‘climate change’ is growing in preferred use to ‘global warming’ because it helps convey that there are [other] changes in addition to rising temperatures.”
Climate change refers to any significant change in measures of climate (such as temperature, precipitation, or wind) lasting for an extended period (decades or longer). Climate change may result from:
natural factors, such as changes in the sun’s intensity or slow changes in the Earth’s orbit around the sun;
natural processes within the climate system (e.g. changes in ocean circulation);
human activities that change the atmosphere’s composition (e.g. through burning fossil fuels) and the land surface (e.g. deforestation, reforestation, urbanization, desertification, etc.)
Global warming is an average increase in the temperature of the atmosphere near the Earth’s surface and in the troposphere, which can contribute to changes in global climate patterns. Global warming can occur from a variety of causes, both natural and human induced. In common usage, “global warming” often refers to the warming that can occur as a result of increased emissions of greenhouse gases from human activities.
The Earth’s climate has changed many times during the planet’s history, with events ranging from ice ages to long periods of warmth. Historically, natural factors such as volcanic eruptions, changes in the Earth’s orbit, and the amount of energy released from the Sun have affected the Earth’s climate. Beginning late in the 18th century, human activities associated with the Industrial Revolution have also changed the composition of the atmosphere and therefore likely are influencing the Earth’s climate.
The EPA climate change Web site has four main sections on climate change issues and another section on “What You Can Do” to reduce your contribution.
Science U.S. Climate Policy Greenhouse Gas Emissions Health and Environmental Effects What You Can Do
Science
For over the past 200 years, the burning of fossil fuels, such as coal and oil, and deforestation have caused the concentrations of heat-trapping “greenhouse gases” to increase significantly in our atmosphere. These gases prevent heat from escaping to space, somewhat like the glass panels of a greenhouse.
Greenhouse gases are necessary to life as we know it, because they keep the planet’s surface warmer than it otherwise would be. But, as the concentrations of these gases continue to increase in the atmosphere, the Earth’s temperature is climbing above past levels. According to NOAA and NASA data, the Earth’s average surface temperature has increased by about 1.2 to 1.4ºF since 1900. The warmest global average temperatures on record have all occurred within the past 15 years, with the warmest two years being 1998 and 2005. Most of the warming in recent decades is likely the result of human activities. Other aspects of the climate are also changing such as rainfall patterns, snow and ice cover, and sea level.
If greenhouse gases continue to increase, climate models predict that the average temperature at the Earth’s surface could increase from 2.5 to 10.4ºF above 1990 levels by the end of this century. Scientists are certain that human activities are changing the composition of the atmosphere, and that increasing the concentration of greenhouse gases will change the planet’s climate. But they are not sure by how much it will change, at what rate it will change, or what the exact effects will be. See the Science and Health and Environmental Effects sections of this site for more detail.
Top of Page
U.S. Climate Policy
The United States government has established a comprehensive policy to address climate change. This policy has three basic components:
Slowing the growth of emissions
Strengthening science, technology and institutions
Enhancing international cooperation
To implement its climate policy, the Federal government is using voluntary and incentive-based programs to reduce emissions and has established programs to promote climate technology and science. This strategy incorporates know-how from many federal agencies and harnesses the power of the private sector.
In February 2002, the United States announced a comprehensive strategy to reduce the greenhouse gas intensity of the American economy by 18 percent over the 10-year period from 2002 to 2012. Greenhouse gas intensity is a measurement of greenhouse gas emissions per unit of economic activity. Meeting this commitment will prevent the release of more than 100 million metric tons of carbon-equivalent emissions to the atmosphere (annually) by 2012 and more than 500 million metric tons (cumulatively) between 2002 and 2012.
EPA plays a significant role in helping the Federal government reach the United States’ intensity goal. EPA has many current and near-term initiatives that encourage voluntary reductions from a variety of stakeholders. Initiatives, such as ENERGY STAR, Climate Leaders, and our Methane Voluntary Programs, encourage emission reductions from large corporations, consumers, industrial and commercial buildings, and many major industrial sectors. For details on these and other initiatives as well as other aspects of U.S. policy, visit the U.S. Climate Policy section of the site.
Top of page
Greenhouse Gas Emissions
In the U.S., our energy-related activities account for three-quarters of our human-generated greenhouse gas emissions, mostly in the form of carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels. More than half the energy-related emissions come from large stationary sources such as power plants, while about a third comes from transportation. Industrial processes (such as the production of cement, steel, and aluminum), agriculture, forestry, other land use, and waste management are also important sources of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States.
For a better understanding of where greenhouse gas emissions come from, governments at the federal, state and local levels prepare emissions inventories, which track emissions from various parts of the economy such as transportation, electricity production, industry, agriculture, forestry, and other sectors. EPA publishes the official national inventory of US greenhouse gas emissions, and the latest greenhouse gas inventory shows that in 2004 the U.S. emitted over 7 billon metric tons of greenhouse gases (a million metric tons of CO2 equivalents (MMTCO2e) is roughly equal to the annual GHG emissions of an average U.S. power plant.) Visit the Emissions section of this site to learn more.
Top of page
Health and Environmental Effects
Climate change affects people, plants, and animals. Scientists are working to better understand future climate change and how the effects will vary by region and over time.
Scientists have observed that some changes are already occurring. Observed effects include sea level rise, shrinking glaciers, changes in the range and distribution of plants and animals, trees blooming earlier, lengthening of growing seasons, ice on rivers and lakes freezing later and breaking up earlier, and thawing of permafrost. Another key issue being studied is how societies and the Earth’s environment will adapt to or cope with climate change.
In the United States, scientists believe that most areas will to continue to warm, although some will likely warm more than others. It remains very difficult to predict which parts of the country will become wetter or drier, but scientists generally expect increased precipitation and evaporation, and drier soil in the middle parts of the country. Northern regions such as Alaska are expected to experience the most warming. In fact, Alaska has been experiencing significant changes in climate in recent years that may be at least partly related to human caused global climate change.
Human health can be affected directly and indirectly by climate change in part through extreme periods of heat and cold, storms, and climate-sensitive diseases such as malaria, and smog episodes. For more information on these and other environmental effects, please visit the Health and Environmental Effects section of this site.
Top of page
What You Can Do
Greenhouse gases are emitted as a result of the energy we use by driving and using electricity and through other activities that support our quality of life like growing food and raising livestock. Greenhouse gas emissions can be minimized through simple measures like changing light bulbs in your home and properly inflating your tires to improve your car’s fuel economy. The What You Can Do section of the climate change site identifies 30 action steps that individuals can take to decrease greenhouse gas emissions, increase the nation’s energy independence and also save money.
State and local governments and businesses play an important role in meeting the national goal of reducing greenhouse gas intensity by 18 percent by 2012. For example, major corporations, states and local organizations are taking action through participation in a wide range of EPA and other federal voluntary programs.
You can start by assessing your own contribution to the problem, by using EPA’s personal greenhouse gas emissions calculator to estimate your household’s annual emissions. Once you know about how much you emit, you use the tool to see how simple steps you take at home, at the office, on the road, and at school can reduce your emissions. Visit the What You Can Do section of this site to learn more.
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Globalwarming awareness2007
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Aftonbladhet
Aftonbladhet `s blogg. Vi har för skoj skull ägnat ngra kvällar t denna blog. Frn början trodde vi inte vi skulle hinna med. Men jag har varit rastlös och satt mig framför datorn ngra kvällar. Sökorden vi försöker komma med bra placeringar p har vi begränsat till aftonbladhet och sökmotoroptimeringstävling som vi försöker att placera oss bra p google med. Bloggen startade 26 december s vra medtävlande har ett stort försprng. Som sagt vi gör detta mest som en kul grej
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