Featured sites
The Blue Carbon
Portal brings together the latest knowledge and
resources on the role of oceans as carbon sinks.
WalkIt provides
walking routes between user-defined points in selected
British cities, with an estimate of the carbon
savings.
Joto
Afrika is a series of printed briefings and online
resources about adapting to climate change in sub-Saharan
Africa.
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The First
Meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto
Protocol is taking place from November 28th to 9th
December 2005 in Montreal, Canada, alongside the 11th
Conference of the Parties (COP-11) to the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change. COP-11 will see
the launch of a five-year work programme on adaptation.
"A certain degree of climate change is no longer
avoidable", said Halldor Thorgeirsson, coordinator of
the Climate Change Secretariat’s
Methods, Inventories and Science Programme. "All
countries need to adapt to the inevitable impacts. Developing
countries will be hardest hit by those impacts and need the
necessary assistance."
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Other issues for discussion at the meetings include
technology (particularly carbon
capture and storage), and strengthening the Clean
Development Mechanism. The post-Kyoto regime will also be
on the agenda. "It will be very complex," said
Elliot
Diringer of the Pew
Center on Global Climate Change. "Any agreement has
to be more flexible than Kyoto but at the same time has to
deliver real cuts in emissions and the Bush administration is
adamantly opposed to any process aimed at widening
Kyoto."
Jennifer Morgan of
WWF International proposes that "developed countries
should continue after 2012 with Kyoto-type commitments with
ever deeper cuts, but developing countries should start with
less strict goals." "The United States wants to
block this process from starting," according to David Doniger
of the Natural Resources
Defense Council. "Look for the United States to use
a variety of strategies to try to veto consensus," he
said, such as lining up Middle Eastern OPEC countries and
India in favour of voluntary approaches.
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Levels of carbon dioxide and methane in the atmosphere
are higher than at any time in the past 650,000 years,
according to a study of Antarctic ice
cores published in the journal Science.
"We find that carbon dioxide is about 30 per cent higher
than at any time, and methane 130 per cent higher than at any
time; and the rates of increase are absolutely exceptional:
for carbon dioxide, two hundred times faster than at any time
in the last 650,000 years," reported project leader
Thomas
Stocker from the University of Bern,
Switzerland.
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In the same journal, an analysis of
ocean sediment cores has revealed that global warming has
already doubled the historic rate of sea-level rise. Over the
past 5,000 years, evidence from the sediment cores shows that
sea levels have risen on average at about 1mm each year, but
since the mid 19th century the rate has been 2mm a year.
"The main thing that has happened since the 19th century
and the beginning of the modern observation has been the
widespread increase in fossil fuel use and more greenhouse
gases," said lead author of the study Kenneth Miller
of Rutgers
University in the United States.
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Jan Egeland,
emergency relief
coordinator for the United Nations, has called for more
effective disaster prevention and preparedness systems.
"If we had had good early warning systems, much fewer
would have died in the Indian Ocean tsunami. If we had had
earthquake-safe schools, hospitals and housing in Northern
Pakistan, tens of thousands would not have lost their
lives. If we had had better levees in New Orleans, those
who lived in the lower lying parts of the city would not
have had to see their lives devastated," he told a
news conference during a meeting of the
International Task Force for Disaster Prevention in
Geneva, Switzerland.
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Egeland noted that 95 per cent of all deaths associated
with natural disasters occur in the developing world,
though disasters were evenly distributed around the world.
"This is one of the biggest challenges of our time and
age, the need to make vulnerable people living in
developing nations more resilient to natural hazards,"
he said. The United Nations wants a central fund for
emergency relief, rather than having to request funds after
disaster strikes.
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Bright Ideas
General Electric plans to
cut solar installation costs by half
Project 90 by 2030 supports South African school
children and managers reduce their carbon footprint
through its Club programme
Bath & North East Somerset Council in the United
Kingdom has installed
smart LED carriageway lighting that automatically
adjusts to light and traffic levels
The United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration and the American Public Gardens
Association are mounting an
educational exhibit at Longwood Gardens
showing the link between temperature and planting
zones
The energy-efficient
Crowne Plaza Copenhagen Towers hotel is powered by
renewable and sustainable sources, including integrated
solar photovoltaics and guest-powered
bicycles
El Hierro, one of the Canary Islands, plans to
generate 80 per cent of its energy from renewable
sources
The green roof on the
Remarkables Primary School in New Zealand reduces
stormwater runoff, provides insulation and doubles as an
outdoor classroom
The
Weather Info for All project aims to roll out up to
five thousand automatic weather observation stations
throughout Africa
SolSource
turns its own waste heat into electricity or stores it in
thermal fabrics, harnessing the sun's energy for
cooking and electricity for low-income
families
The
Wave House uses vegetation for its architectural and
environmental qualities, and especially in terms of
thermal insulation
The Mbale
compost-processing plant in Uganda produces cheaper
fertilizer and reduces greenhouse gas
emissions
At Casa Grande,
Frito-Lay has reduced energy consumption by nearly a
fifth since 2006 by, amongst other things, installing a
heat recovery system to preheat cooking oil
More Bright
Ideas...
Tiempo Climate Newswatch
Updated: April 12th 2013 |