The Glory of the Garden
81
Food for Thought
Curated by David Rowing
Follow
Scooped by David Rowing onto The Glory of the Garden
Scoop.it!

IEA report reminds us peak oil idea has gone up in flames

IEA report reminds us peak oil idea has gone up in flames | The Glory of the Garden | Scoop.it

 Given the bubbling cauldron of violence that the middle East so frequently and regrettably is, the prospect of the US outstripping Saudi Arabia as the world's biggest oil producer in the next decade is deeply striking. The redrawing of the geopolitical map may cool some tensions and perhaps spark others.

 

But the truly global implications of the International Energy Agency's flagship report for 2012 lie elsewhere, in the quietly devastating statement that no more than one-third of already proven reserves of fossil fuels can be burned by 2050 if the world is to prevent global warming exceeding the danger point of 2C. This means nothing less than leaving most of the world's coal, oil and gas in the ground or facing a destabilised climate, with its supercharged heatwaves, floods and storms

No comment yet.
David Rowing is also curating
100 Acre Wood The Barley Mow In Deep Water Insight Europe
Discover Topics David Rowing is following
Content Curation World Upcycled Garden Style Social Media Content Curation Vertical Farm - Food Factory EPIC Infographic World Environment Nature News
and 112 others
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by David Rowing
Scoop.it!

Positive Changes to Biodiversity - Wellington NZ

Positive Changes to Biodiversity - Wellington NZ | The Glory of the Garden | Scoop.it

"We have lost 95 percent of our lowland forest, most of our wetlands and dunes, and three quarters of our bird species are threatened. But working with volunteers and other councils and agencies, we are gaining ground in the battle to reverse the loss of Wellington's biodiversity."
The most obvious success story is our growing native bird populations. Tui are flourishing - bellbird, whitehead, kakariki, tomtit and kaka numbers are increasing and we're now seeing kereru nesting in our reserves.
"Behind these changes are planting and pest management programmes that are creating healthier forest with fewer pests where birds can prosper," says Cr Ritchie.

No comment yet.
Scooped by David Rowing
Scoop.it!

Conserving biodiversity hotspots 'could bring world's poor $500bn a year'

Conserving biodiversity hotspots 'could bring world's poor $500bn a year' | The Glory of the Garden | Scoop.it
Study puts economic value on the indirect ecosystem services provided by the world's poorest people...
No comment yet.
Rescooped by David Rowing from Vertical Farm - Food Factory
Scoop.it!

Indian Man Single-Handedly Plants a 1,360 Acre Forest

Indian Man Single-Handedly Plants a 1,360 Acre Forest | The Glory of the Garden | Scoop.it
As a teenager, Jadav Payeng began planting trees on a barren sandbar in India. 30 years later, it's home to a sprawling forest.

Via Alan Yoshioka
No comment yet.