New York City produces 1% of Nation's 
                                        Greenhouse Gasses 
                                      Green 
                                        house gases: New York City produces 
                                        nearly 1 percent of the nation's greenhouse 
                                        gas emissions - an amount that puts it 
                                        on par with Ireland or Portugal - according 
                                        to a city study. 
                                        
                                        The study, released Tuesday, was initiated 
                                        by Mayor Michael Bloomberg to assess the 
                                        city's progress in reducing its greenhouse 
                                        gas emissions by 30 percent by 2030. It 
                                        was conducted by the mayor's Office of 
                                        Long-term Planning and Sustainability. 
                                        
                                        
                                        "You have to have a real baseline 
                                        or we're just talking past each other 
                                        as to what works and what doesn't work 
                                        - we won't ever know whether we really 
                                        made a difference,'' Bloomberg said. 
                                        
                                        The study found that the buildings, subways, 
                                        buses, cars and decomposition of waste 
                                        in America's most populous city produced 
                                        a net emission of 58.3 million metric 
                                        tons of greenhouse gases in 2005. The 
                                        report said the city's emissions "are 
                                        currently as much as those of Ireland 
                                        or Portugal." 
                                        
                                        The U.S. total was 7.26 billion metric 
                                        tons for that year. 
                                        
                                        Greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, 
                                        methane and other gases, essentially trap 
                                        energy from the sun, which warms the Earth's 
                                        surface and lower atmosphere. Many scientists 
                                        believe human activity that increases 
                                        those gases is contributing to global 
                                        warming. 
                                        
                                        The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate 
                                        Change, a United Nations network of 2,000 
                                        scientists, warned last week of possible 
                                        catastrophic risks such as floods, disease, 
                                        food shortages, species extinction and 
                                        human suffering throughout the world. 
                                        
                                        
                                        The city has 2.7 percent of the country's 
                                        population - 8.2 million of 300 million 
                                        - and the average New York City resident 
                                        contributes less than a third of the emissions 
                                        generated by a typical American. This 
                                        is largely due to the popularity of the 
                                        city's mass transit system, which cuts 
                                        down on car emissions, officials said. 
                                        
                                        
                                        The operation of the city's hundreds of 
                                        thousands of buildings - which consume 
                                        electricity, natural gas, fuel oil and 
                                        steam - contribute 79 percent of the city's 
                                        emissions total. 
                                        
                                        The study found that the city's focus 
                                        on environmentally friendly initiatives 
                                        - including alternative fuel vehicles, 
                                        energy efficient traffic lights and green 
                                        buildings - appears to have helped stabilize 
                                        emissions rates in recent years. 
                                        
                                        "Each one of these things really 
                                        does make a difference, and they add up,'' 
                                        Bloomberg said. 
                                        
                                        Still, emissions were found to have increased 
                                        by more than 8 percent between 1995 and 
                                        2005, the study found.