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Rescooped by SustainOurEarth from The Bottom Line onto Sustain Our Earth |
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From
www.sltrib.com
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April 21, 1:11 PM
Rob Gillies and his team gather data on Nepal’s changing climate for a research project. They log temperatures, raindrops and snow. They pump the numbers into powerful computers and read the trend lines the computers ... Delete the scoop?
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From
climatecrocks.com
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Today, 1:11 AM
I'm declaring the tornado drought officially over. Monday's horrifying events in Oklahoma are still being sorted out. Standard disclaimers apply, "No particular weather event ..." etc I have a sta... Delete the scoop?
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From
e360.yale.edu
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May 20, 9:01 PM
Illegal logging and unchecked economic development are taking a devastating toll on the forests of Vietnam and neighboring countries, threatening areas of biodiversity so rich that 1,700 species have been discovered in the last 15 years alone. Delete the scoop?
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From
www.greenbiz.com
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May 20, 8:51 PM
Defining resilience goes a long way to understanding what to put under the umbrella of climate resiliency. Delete the scoop?
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From
insights.wri.org
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May 20, 7:44 PM
WRI‘s new issue brief surveys the progress and challenges China faces in regulating the environmental and social impacts of its overseas investments. I sat down with WRI senior associate and China expert, Hu Tao, to talk about China’s overseas investment landscape. Before joining WRI, Tao worked as a senior environmental economist with China’s Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP). Here’s what he had to say: Delete the scoop?
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Apple (like many giant, multinational corporations) has been avoiding paying the taxes they owe to the country by setting up foreign "subsidiaries" in tax-haven countries, and moving jobs out of the country. Delete the scoop?
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PLASTIC foam dinnerware, allowed to be used again after a 14-year ban was lifted recently, is being made from industrial waste and toxic chemicals in a city in south China's Guangdong Province, according to an undercover... Delete the scoop?
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Where does concrete come from? The material has become such a pervasive symbol of human alienation from nature that it's tempting to assume it's just another brutish product of the ... Delete the scoop?
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Forecast global temperature rise of 4C a calamity for large swaths of planet even if predicted extremes are not reached Delete the scoop?
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From
online.wsj.com
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May 20, 5:18 PM
A vote over fluoridated water has prompted something of an existential crisis in this left-leaning city. Weighing in: Indie rockers, craft-beer brewers and organic-food purveyors. Delete the scoop?
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From
www.reuters.com
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May 20, 5:16 PM
WATFORD CITY, North Dakota (Reuters) - In towns across North Dakota, the wellhead of the North American energy boom, the locals have taken to quoting the adage: Whiskey is for drinking, and water is for... Delete the scoop?
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From
www.nytimes.com
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May 20, 12:16 PM
Beach nourishment projects will restore shorelines but require expensive upkeep and affect ecosystems; federal taxpayers will foot the bill. Delete the scoop?
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From
www.mining.com
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Today, 1:17 AM
Companies could apply for mining licences as soon as 2016 to extract gold, copper and more. Delete the scoop?
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From
thinkprogress.org
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May 20, 9:02 PM
The Canadian government has nearly doubled its spending to promote the Keystone XL pipeline to $16.5 million, up from $9 million a year ago. Delete the scoop?
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From
earth911.com
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May 20, 8:53 PM
We’ve all heard that it’s good to drink orange juice and eat chicken noodle soup when we’re sick, but did you know there are plenty of other foods you can eat to help treat minor ailments like colds, seasonal allergies, upset stomachs and sore throats? It turns out many items you already have in your kitchen can help relieve symptoms of common illnesses and even some chronic health problems. Click through to find out how you can put your kitchen to work for your health. Delete the scoop?
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More than 32 million people fled their homes last year because of disasters such as floods, storms and earthquakes Delete the scoop?
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From
insights.wri.org
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May 20, 7:46 PM
The Climate Investment Funds (CIFs), one of the world’s largest dedicated funding facilities for climate change mitigation/adaptation projects, have now been in operation for five years. It’s a good time to step back and evaluate what lessons we’re learning from these important sources of climate finance. Delete the scoop?
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A large, violent tornado has carved a long, destructive path on the south side of Oklahoma City. Delete the scoop?
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As China absorbs the news that quite a bit of its rice contains too much of the toxic metal cadmium, the state-run media are advising people to diversify the geographical sources of their food, to reduce risk. Delete the scoop?
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Residents of Manhattan will not just sweat harder from rising temperatures in the future, says a new study; many may die. Heat events are one of the greatest hazards faced by urban populations around the globe.- Radley Horton, Columbia University Researchers at Columbia University estimate deaths linked to warming climate may rise some 20 percent by the 2020s, and, in some worst-case scenarios, 90 percent or more 70 years hence. Higher winter temperatures may partially offset heat-related deaths by cutting cold-related mortality, but even so, scientists say annual net temperature-related deaths might go up a third. Delete the scoop?
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KSN-TV employees and meteorologists took shelter from a tornado Sunday while continuing to broadcast from a safe place. Delete the scoop?
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From
www.nytimes.com
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May 20, 5:17 PM
Parts of the vast High Plains Aquifer, once a prodigious source of water, are now so low that crops can’t be watered and bridges span arid stream beds. Delete the scoop?
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From
www.ft.com
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May 20, 5:14 PM
Wang Fuguo, a 63-year-old cotton farmer, does not know when his ancestors began tilling the land in the dusty village of Weijie. But he is fairly sure he will be the last of his family to do so. Delete the scoop?
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From
www.nytimes.com
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May 20, 12:15 PM
A growing body of mortality research on immigrants has shown that the longer they live in the United States, the worse their rates of heart disease, high blood pressure and diabetes. Delete the scoop?
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