Related Blog Posts
How Carbon Credits Contribute To A Cleaner Planet
1 day ago ago from hybridrentalcar
By Diane Scott Commercial and individual use of fossil fuels to create energy has been widespread for many decades throughout the world. However, fossil fuels let out hazardous greenhouse gases like methane and CO2, which result in a lot of harm to the environment. High accumulation of these greenhouse gases in the air is leading to global warming, with grave repercussions for the planet. With the objective of reducing the emissions ...
Related contentNew research: The economic cost of a 42 per cent reduction in carbon dioxide emissions by 2020
11 hours ago ago from The TaxPayers' Alliance - Economics 101
The recent TaxPayers’ Alliance report Ending the Green Rip-Off: Reforming climate change policy to reduce the burden on families showed that existing climate change policy is imposing an excessive and inefficient burden on families and businesses. The report cited Citigroup analysis which suggests climate change policy is already heading for an “affordability crisis”. Prime Minister Gordon Brown has now offered, at the climate change ...
Related contentSilence in republic: Carbon Trading and American Dazzle of DOLLARS in COPENHAGEN.Developed nations should deliver on Kyoto Protocol, says Manmohan Singh
4 hours ago ago from Palashbiswaskl\'s Weblog
Silence in republic: Carbon Trading and American Dazzle of DOLLARS in COPENHAGEN.Developed nations should deliver on Kyoto Protocol, says Manmohan Singh Troubled Galaxy Destroyed Dreams, chapter 432 Palash Biswas http://indianholocaustmyfatherslifeandtime.blogspot.com/ Republic of silence P.V. Narasimha Rao’s forgotten promise Hokum must have its kingdom. The judicial report on the ...
Related contentUSGS: New Science Estimates Carbon Storage Potential of U.S. Lands
7 hours ago ago from GIS and Science
Nation’s Forests and Soils Store Equivalent of 50 Years of U.S. CO 2 Emissions The first phase of a groundbreaking national assessment estimates that U.S. forests and soils could remove additional quantities of carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) from the atmosphere as a means to mitigate climate change. The lower 48 states in the U.S. hypothetically have the potential to store an additional 3-7 billion metric tons of carbon in forests, if ...
Related contentInteresting post about global warming
21 hours ago ago from Skeptical Eye
Over at Freedomain Radio . And so our global warming battle continues :D This guy is not a climatologist. He is a politician, and his motives are questionable. Please, do not take this guy's word. Check out the scientific literature for yourself. In my non-expert opinion, from the evidence I have been exposed to, it appears undeniably true that anthropogenic global warming is occurring. That does not mean that other factors are not ...
Related contentRelated News
Acid oceans: the 'evil twin' of climate change
7 hours ago ago from U.S. News
Acid oceans: the 'evil twin' of climate change MONTEREY BAY NATIONAL MARINE SANCTUARY, Calif. (AP) -- Far from Copenhagen's turbulent climate talks, the sea lions, harbor seals and sea otters reposing along the shoreline and kelp forests of this protected marine area stand to gain from any global deal to cut greenhouse gases. These foragers of the sanctuary's frigid waters, flipping in and out of sight of California's coastal kayakers, may ...
Related contentSteven Solomon: Row For Water: Katie Spotz, Row, Row Our Boat
9 hours ago ago from Huffington Post
As the throngs at Copenhagen pack their bags and disperse from the historic summit back to all corners of the globe, a lone young Ohio woman, Katie Spotz, 24, is getting set to start out on a solitary, sea level voyage to row across the Atlantic Ocean. Her purpose: To inspire at least 1,000 individuals to make $30 donations to San Francisco's Blue Planet Run Foundation, which will, in turn, be able to finance relief for a thousand of the one ...
Related contentSteve Orlins: Copenhagen: China's Chance to Lead; Where is the United States?
23 hours ago ago from Huffington Post
In 1979, when I moved to Beijing to help set up one of my then-employer's first foreign law firm offices, landline communication in China was virtually nonexistent. In many parts of China, to talk with a friend, you rode a bike or a bus to their home. To place an order with a local business, you walked there. Thirty years later, China is a country buzzing, beeping and singing with cell phones. More than 700 million phones are in use. What ...
Related contentRelated Videos
Nothing to see... move along.
