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CLIMATE SCIENCE
British PM praises Australia's carbon plan: report
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) July 31, 2011

British Prime Minister David Cameron has written to Australian leader Julia Gillard in support of her planned tax on carbon to combat climate change, describing it as a "bold step", a report said.

The Sun-Herald reported that the Conservative leader had told Gillard the policy would "add momentum to those, in both the developed and developing world, who are serious about dealing with this urgent threat".

"I was delighted to hear of the ambitious package of climate change policy measures you announced on 10 July and wanted to congratulate you on taking this bold step," he wrote, the paper said Sunday.

Labor leader Gillard's plan to impose a tax on the nation's 500 biggest carbon polluters to cut down on harmful emissions has proven divisive in Australia.

While Canberra says the tax will help slow global warming and save natural treasures such as the Great Barrier Reef, critics say it will make not change global emissions but hurt industry, cost jobs and increase the cost of living.

About 1,000 people gathered in central Sydney's Hyde Park on Sunday to call for a fresh election on the issue, saying Gillard had no mandate to introduce the tax in mid-2012 as planned when she was narrowly elected in August 2010.

Gillard has argued that a fixed price on carbon pollution -- or an effective tax -- is the most effective way for the system to work until it switches to an emissions trading scheme in 2015.




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CLIMATE SCIENCE
80 percent of world climate data are not computerized
Madrid, Spain (SPX) Jul 26, 2011
In order to gain a better knowledge of climate variations, such as those caused by global warming, and be able to tackle them, we need to understand what happened in the recent past. This is the conclusion of a research study led by the Rovira i Virgili University (URV), which shows that the scientific community today is only able to access and analyse 20% of the recorded climate information hel ... read more


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