Home > Japanese City Switches Focus from Global Warming to 'Global Heating' to Show Urgency >
2009.05.27 Wed

Japanese City Switches Focus from Global Warming to 'Global Heating' to Show Urgency

The city of Kawaguchi, in Japan's Saitama Prefecture, declared on April 1, 2009, that it has officially started using the term "global heating" instead of "global warming." This was decided because the city's administration believes the term global warming gives an impression of mild climate change. This change aims to appropriately reflect the critical situation of the natural environment currently facing the world.

The mayor of Kawaguchi met Japan's environment minister on January 23, 2009, and proposed that the nation starts referring to ongoing global climate change as global heating, in order to communicate more of a sense of urgency among the public. In an organizational change for fiscal 2009, the city established a new department in its environment division to promote further global heating measures and implement concrete actions.

During this initial year of its new initiative, the city aims to take measures such as cutting the number of cars on the road by introducing a car-sharing system, dealing with waste more effectively, reducing the amount of garbage generated, and promoting urban greening.

Kawaguchi City official website
http://www.city.kawaguchi.lg.jp/guide/e/

Posted: 2009/05/27 06:00:15 AM


| Posted by jfs |
NEXT ACTION
Search more news from JFS   
Read next article: METI Announces 55 Leading Japanese Social Businesses
Read previous article: Nation's First Effort to Combine Car-Sharing and Public Transport in Tokyo
Support JFS
About JFS
RELATED NEWS

Japanese Institute Evaluates Carbon Balances of Tropical Forests in Southeast Asia, Deforestation Effects using New Model
Honda to Reduce CO2 Emissions from Global Products by 30%
Toyota CRDL Succeeds in World's First Artificial Photosynthesis Using only Water and CO2
Temperatures at Higher Latitudes of Northern Hemisphere to Rise More than Predicted
Japanese Shipping Company Releases Online CO2 Calculator for Cargo Transport

Creative Commons