Jul 05

That new energy concept named a solar tower is able to generate enough electricity for 200,000 homes.In fact, this looking like a giant smokestack appurtenance would release no noxious fumes — just sun-heated air.
Some of these days was told that the demonstrated more than 20 years ago project has the basic design calls for solar collectors to warm the air near Earth’s surface in order to channel it up the tall central tower then. Turbines placed at the bottom make electricity from the updraft.
“It’s a combination chimney, windmill, greenhouse,” said Kim Forté of EnviroMission Limited in South Melbourne, Australia.
Continue reading The giant solar tower project
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Jun 17

The International Symposium: “ICTs and Climate Change” Organized by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
Supported and hosted by BT plc has started today and may continue tomorrow also. Some of the public global warming topic are as goes: Session 1: Climate change: ICTs to the rescue? , Corporate responsibility:Towards a climate-neutral ICT Sector
, ICTs for monitoring climate change, ICTs as a green technology, Towards a high-bandwidth, low carbon future, Adapting to climate change and Review and Wrap-up. Here you can download some pdf and word format documents around this initiative. Contact tsbtechwatch@itu.int for more information
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Jun 04

“It really does look like microbes are sensitive to global changes. We are just not quite sure how they will respond,”
Breaking news from the world of global warm and climate change dated to the new day. The scientists warns on the forced biological diversity that comes with the global problem. Global warming and climate change may also impact the microscopic organisms, fungi and other microbial populations that support our life on Earth.
“Microbes perform a number of critical functions for ecosystems … we are only starting to understand the impact that global climate change is having on them,” were the words of Kathleen Treseder of the University of California.
Kathleen Treseder studied the effect of rising temperatures and fungi on carbon stores in Alaskan boreal forests, one area of the globe that is experiencing greater warming than others.
“There is a lot of frozen dead material under the snow pack. There is as much carbon trapped in the soil of northern ecosystems as there is carbon in the atmosphere. It is a big unknown what is going to happen if these environments heat up,” said Treseder.
Her research has been started with the hypothesis that an increase in temperatures would lead to increased decomposition by fungi and micro organisms and since one by-product of decomposition is carbon dioxide, rising temperatures should result in its greater release from the soil. What she found was that nitrogen levels in the soil increased as temperatures rose, which tends to suppress fungal decomposition rates.
Continue reading Climate change May Cause The Micro Organisms
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Jun 04

Today may finish the celebration of the world maritime university, which was started at July 2nd at Malmö Börshus, Malmö, Sweden. As regular party of the global initiative for sustainable growth and climate fight, their quoter century anniversary must be noted with the ICCMI Conference 2008, where experts from around the globe are discussing how climate change might affect various maritime and coastal activities, tips and tricks of evaluating measures to ensure the sustainability of maritime industries. Here we got attached some useful documents in order to this public event, check the full information at pdf format and Symposium Programme.
Continue reading Impacts Of Climate Change On The Maritime Industry 2008
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May 26
One of the few that may confirm You how important is our mission.
The Centers for Environmental and Climatic Interaction (CECI) is a non-profit partnership among government, academia and industry that provides trusted climate change information and analysis to policymakers, business leaders and the public.
Located in Asheville, North Carolina, home of NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center, CECI provides innovative education strategies, natural resource impact analysis, visualization technologies and other tools for making crucial decisions.
To explore how we can collaborate with or assist you, please contact Ron Gordon, CECI’s Program Manager, at 828-231-0679, or info@climatealive.org.
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