Published on Wednesday, August 26, 2009 by
USA Today
Report: Future US Heat
Waves Will Be Worse
by Dan Vergano
The nation is headed for strong heat waves in coming decades that
will hit cities and farmers and threaten wildlife with extinction,
a new global warming report warns.
The report, "More Extreme Heat Waves: Global Warming's Wake Up
Call," sponsored by medical, environmental and civil rights
organizations, comes as a legislative fight over a climate change
bill gets ready to resume next month in Congress. Its remedies are
based on recent findings of global warming effects by the U.S.
Global Change Research Program, which coordinates climate research
across federal agencies.........Read Article
The Dark
Side of Climate Change: It's Already Too Late, Cap and Trade Is a
Scam, and Only the Few Will Survive
Father of the Gaia Theory, James
Lovelock says we can't stop climate change, but that humanity
will continue in some smaller form.
The recent narrow passage of the Waxman-Markey energy bill,
better known as cap-and-trade, marks halftime in Congress' first
attempt to put a lid on national carbon emissions. The bill’s
supporters ended the half on top in a squeaker -- 219 yeas to 212
nays. But it’s far from clear what this lead means, either for the
bill or the climate. The legislation’s fate remains as uncertain as
our own.........Read Article
More than four fifths of people support the introduction of a
nature reserve in our seas to protect stocks of fish, according to
a survey published today on World Oceans Day.
The poll came
ahead of the launch of a film, The End Of The Line, which reveals
the impacts of overfishing on the world's oceans.
With climate change deepening the water crisis, wonky discussions
of how to manage our water systems are suddenly attracting
increased public attention. "Unlike oil, there's no substitute for
fresh water," says Maude Barlow,
senior advisor on water to the president of the United Nations
General Assembly. "We all need it."..........more
Global Cooling is Here
Evidence for Predicting
Global Cooling for the Next Three Decades
The following article
represents an alternative view and analysis of global
climate change, which challenges the dominant Global Warming
Consensus.
Global Research does not necessarily endorse the proposition
of "Global Cooling", nor does it accept at face value the
Consensus on Global Warming. Our purpose is to encourage a
more balanced debate on the topic of global climate change.
INTRODUCTION
Despite no global
warming in 10 years and recording
setting cold in 2007-2008, the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climatic
Change (IPCC) and computer modelers
who believe that CO2 is the
cause of global warming still predict
the Earth is in store for catastrophic
warming in this century. IPCC computer
models have predicted global warming
of 1° F per decade and 5-6° C (10-11°
F) by 2100 (Fig. 1), which would cause
global catastrophe with ramifications
for human life, natural habitat,
energy and water resources, and food
production. All of this is predicated
on the assumption that global
warming is caused by increasing
atmospheric CO2 and that CO2
will continue to rise rapidly.........more
The reality for the average Indian remains
the same: agricultural cultivation and the ability to farm is
the bedrock of rural living. With its historical practices,
values, and communal sentiments of respect, cultivation and the
practice of farming has embedded roots. Farming for Indians is
not only a source of income – it is a source of culture and
identity. Since the late 1990s however, Indian governmental
officials have wilfully compromised this sentiment for the
‘bright lights’ associated with the West.
After over a decade of trade liberalization
and free market reforms, mainstream economic development has
left rural India to fend for itself. Amidst great levels of
industrialization and growth, the vast majority of Indians have
been left behind. Agriculture is the primary source of
livelihood for some 70% of Indians[1].Considering the fact that
only 1% of Americans and 2-3% of Europeans derive their
livelihood from agriculture, this is a huge level of
dependence[2].