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News |
Scientific expertise lacking among 'doubters' of climate change: Stanford research
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Here is a significant study sh... |
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Articles |
Christopher Monckton refuted by the scientist John Abraham and others
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| climate |
Videos |
The Meatrix
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The Meatrix |
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| climate |
Videos |
Food Inc Trailer
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Food Inc Trailer |
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| climate |
Online Resources |
Resources for the Future RSS feed
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Here is the energy and climate section of th... |
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Online Resources |
Encyclopedia of Earth - Climate RSS Feed
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Videos |
Videos on Climate Change / Global Warming
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| climate |
Events |
Salt Lake City 10/24 Event
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Our 350.org event was held at Library Square, 2nd East and 4th South, in Downtown Salt Lake City, Saturday, October 24, 2009, 2-5 pm. Click here for map. About 800 came! Bringing their family and friends. This was part of the call for Climate Justice as our leaders head to Copenhagen.
What we asked:
Come - inspire and be inspired - be part of the solution:
Learn - organizations focused on social justice and environmental issues will be there providing information and answering your questions - our list of sponsors is growing
Create - there will be many opportunities to admire and create art focused on the 350 message - Check out our Call for Artists.
Listen - local artists will perform and local speakers will inspire you to action
Participate - in delivering our international message to Copenhagen - at 3:30 pm we will all gather together to create a huge human 350 which will be photographed at 3:50 pm and sent to 350.org as part of this international call for Climate Justice
For more information, contact: Joan M. Gregory, green@slcuu.org.
So, what's 350 about anyway?
No time for a long wordy explanation - check out this 90 second video created by 350.org. 350.org did their best to boil down the science of global warming and vision of the 350 Campaign in 90 seconds.
In a landmark series of studies, NASA climatologist, James Hansen and his team have shown that if we let the amount of carbon in the atmosphere top 350 parts per million, we can’t have a planet “similar to the one on which civilization developed and to which life on earth is adapted.”
The bad news is we’re already past this number — we’re at 390 parts per million and climbing, which is why the Arctic is melting, why drought is spreading across the planet, why people are already dying from diseases like dengue fever and malaria occurring in places where they’ve never been seen before.
The good news is that number gives us a target to aim for. When the world’s leaders meet in Copenhagen in December to reach agreement on a new climate treaty, we need them to go further than they’ve planned to go: we need to make sure they’ll pay attention to the latest science and put forward a plan that gets us back to safety.
People in communities around the globe are coming together on this day (October 24, 2009) to focus attention (ours and our leaders') on getting us back to 350. Our goal is to change the conversation and the results in Copenhagen, improving our chances for a livable future.
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| climate |
Events |
Three International Climate Change Symposia
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Three International Climate Change Symposia
Climate Change andImpact Assessment Symposium
Aalborg, Denmark. 25-26 October 2010
Climate Change and Impact Assessment
Washington, D.C. - November 15-16, 2010
A third symposium is tentatively being planned for Asia.
Continue to check www.iaia.org for updates.
The symposia will emphasize practical examples and guidance useful for project design and operational management of hydroelectric and other energy facilities, irrigation projects, water supply and waste water treatment projects, roads and other transport, coastal projects, tourism facilities and other infrastructure likely to be aff ected by changes in water availability or extreme weather events as a result of climate change. The symposium will also explore the application of strategic environmental assessment (SEA) and cumulative effects assessment (CEA).
Adaptation and mitigation measures need to be addressed at the level of policies, programs and projects, locally, regionally and globally, because climate change is expected to:
Affect the productivity of biological resourcesand ecosystems.
Alter the emergence and distribution of infectious diseases in plants, animals, and humans.
Increase the costs of extreme weather for transportation, trade, tourism, and other infrastructure–especially in developing nations.
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| climate |
Events |
Tools for Change Workshop CCAN
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The Northern Virginia Climate Action Network (NoVaCAN) is sponsoring a free public event Feb 27, 2010:
Energy Efficiency, Messaging and Media
-Update on federal climate registration, Audubon
-The economic impacts of energy efficiency, American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy
-How businesses can cut emissions, INOVA Health Systems
-Challenging your community to go green, Arlingtonians for a Clean Environment
-How building design can improve efficiency, Virginia Sustainable Building Network
-How to explain climate change, GMU Climate Change Communication Center
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