An unnatural weather change is the drawn out warming of the planet's general temperature. In spite of the fact that this warming pattern has been continuing for quite a while, its movement has essentially expanded over the most recent hundred years because of the consuming of non-renewable energy sources. As the human populace has expanded, so has the volume of petroleum derivatives consumed. Petroleum products incorporate coal, oil, and flammable gas, and consuming them causes what is known as the "Green House Effect" in Earth's climate. The Green House Effect is the point at which the Sun's beams infiltrate the environment, yet when that warmth is reflected off the surface can't escape once again into space. Gases delivered by the consuming of petroleum derivatives keep the warmth from leaving the climate. These nursery gasses are carbon dioxide, chlorofluorocarbons, water fume, methane, and nitrous oxide. The overabundance heat in the air has made the normal worldwide temperature rise extra time, also called an unnatural weather change
HTML PDFShare this article
Journal of Environmental Hazards received 51 citations as per Google Scholar report