Crafty ways to fight climate change
Published: 21 January, 2009, 12:28
Scientists have put forward their ideas on how global warming can be tackled without cutting carbon emissions.
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A businessman in Alaska has had a five-tonne ice sculpture of Al Gore built as part of a campaign to challenge the widely accepted global warming theory.
A three-year study has revealed that Australia’s camel population is out of control. More than a million of the beasts, known as ships of the desert, are hoovering up scarce resources. But boffins down under have tabled a solution to the problem, which m
Typhoons and hurricanes act as a natural pressure valve to help Earth resist global warming, according to a new study. The findings in the Nature Geoscience journal say the storms capture large amounts of carbon and bury them on the ocean floor.
21.10.2010, 18:36
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Russia is considering becoming the world’s top supplier of fresh water as growing demand turns it into a strategic resource. That is if it can upgrade its own consumption to modern standards.
26.10.2009, 08:58
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Bruce Bueno de Mesquita’s work as a consultant with the CIA has earned him the name ‘The New Nostradamus’. RT caught up with the modern prophet to find out what to expect in the future.
24.02.2009, 16:13
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A much smaller change of mean temperatures may cause disastrous consequences, a new study into global warming said.
10.02.2010, 11:54
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A Canadian architectural firm has presented its solution to the apocalyptic scenario in which global warming causes a drastic rise in sea level. The Gyre project is a giant floating self-sustained habitat.
16.02.2009, 10:16
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They are the bane of Britain’s motorists, but after an environmentally- friendlier makeover, speed bumps look set to be the latest asset in the rush for renewables.
Early results from the latest field experiment on the ‘ocean fertilisation’ to cool the planet suggest the technique will fail.
The G8 unbinding agreement to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 80% by 2050 concerns developed countries only, told RT Nobuo Tanaka, the Executive Director of the International Energy Agency.
Published: 21 January, 2009, 12:28
Scientists have put forward their ideas on how global warming can be tackled without cutting carbon emissions.