Using various economic factors and forecast periods, calculate global and regional emission scenarios by source for CO2 and CH4 with CDIAC's IEA/ORAU Long-Term Global Energy-CO2 Model (http://cdiac.esd.ornl.gov/ndps/cmp002pc.html).
Want to calculate how many pounds of CO2 YOUR household produces daily? Try ABC's Carbon Dioxide Calculator (http://more.abcnews.go.com/sections/us/DailyNews/co2_calc1007.html).
Need more climate change and global warming information? Visit EPA's Global Warming site (http://www.epa.gov/globalwarming/) where special sites offering educational resources and classroom projects are available to students and teachers.
Have questions about climate change issues and the greenhouse effect? Get answers from the Climate Change Information Kit (http://www.unep.ch/iuc/submenu/infokit/factcont.htm) available from the United Nations Environment Programme's Information Unit for Conventions (IUC).
The Kids' and Teachers' Corner (http://www.yoto98.noaa.gov/kids.htm) of NOAA's International Year of the Ocean page provides lots to interest kids and teachers alike.
A "first of its kind" climate change search engine, dubbed the "Climate Ark" was recently released by the Ecological Enterprises, Inc. (EEI) (http://www.climateark.org/) that allows users to perform full-text searches and view the most targeted climate change information on the Web.

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