“…Stronger global commitments and carbon pricing would help implement such policies at scale and in time. Moreover (Hassan & Zaki, 2018) studied for three states of fossil fuel in Iraq, the analysis of CO 2 emissions and for three types of fossil fuels: gas, liquid, steel, gases emitted from these cases are considered greenhouse gases, which in turn affect the radiation balance of the Earth, where the emission density is the average rate of emission. Therefore, the burning of carbon since the Industrial Revolution increased the concentration of CO 2 in the atmosphere, as results showed that the consumption of gaseous fuel increased by about 10 times, up to 1,045.10 kt, the CO 2 emission presented from the consumption of fossil fuels increased by 10.4 greater than it was, which reached to 86,759 kt.…”