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Carbon FootprintCarbon Footprint : PhrasesMeaning: The amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted during an industrial or domestic process; a measure of how that process contributes toward global warming. Origin: A spam e-mail that I received recently (April 2007) encouraged me to diet at Easter by 'offsetting my chocolate footprint'. That's an indication of how quickly the recent interest in the environment is making its presence felt in the language. Not so long ago a 'footprint' was just that; the print made by a foot. News stories now use 'footprint' as shorthand for 'carbon footprint'. It was space exploration that gave the word a new lease of life. That wasn't via the moon landings and the celebrated 'one small step for man', but as a term indicating the oval area that a spacecraft aimed to land in. That was defined in 1965 in the Science Year newsletter:
Following that, the field of computing took up the term and before long there were footprints on our desks. The December 1982 edition of Computerworld magazine referred to the 'desktop footprint':
That introduced the idea of the effect of the PC on our desktop and the notion that 'small footprint good; large footprint bad'. The 'carbon footprint', otherwise called the 'global footprint' or 'ecological footprint', is now widely used, although possibly less so in the USA than in other parts of the English-speaking world. The term was introduced to a UK audience in the early years of the new millennium. For example, this piece from the Welsh newspaper The Western Mail, July 2005:
Footprints are creeping in in some very odd places. My guess is that 'chocolate footprints' won't be the end of it. Phrases Index |
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