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EPA no longer updates EPA's Global Warming Site, but is maintaining this archive for historical purposes. Please see EPA's Climate Change site for current information on climate change and global warming.
Make A Difference In the Yard
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Revisit your landscaping practices.
- Plant deciduous trees
in strategic locations around your home, including easement areas if permitted. The shade the trees cast can reduce your energy consumption. In addition to energy savings, another benefit is that trees store ("sequester") carbon during photosynthesis and can remove 50 pounds of carbon in a year. Design your yard for xeriscaping (plants that require little watering).
- Use a composting lawnmower. Composting yard waste on site reduces the waste stream sent to your community's landfill, and landfills generate a potent gas called "methane" that adds to global warming. For more information on the relationship between climate change and waste, visit EPA's Climate Change and Waste website.
- Using a push mower instead of a power mower will reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 80 pounds per year.
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