December 30, 2007 24/7 News Coverage TerraDaily Advertising Kit
Arctic ice melt Canada's top weather concern in 2007
Montreal (AFP) Dec 27, 2007
The "shocking" record loss of Arctic sea ice was Canada's top weather event in 2007, Canada's environment ministry said Thursday. Each year for the past 12, Environment Canada has published a list of the top 10 climate or weather phenomena to impact Canada that year. For 2007, "the dramatic disappearance of Arctic sea ice -- reported in September -- was so shocking that it quickly became ... read more

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Natural catastrophes will grow with climate change: re-insurer
Frankfurt (AFP) Dec 27, 2007
Natural catastrophes in 2007 were more frequent and costlier than a year earlier and climate change will make them more expensive still, the world's second-biggest re-insurer, Munich Re, said Thursday. There were 950 natural catastrophes in 2007 compared with 850 in 2006, the highest number since the group started compiling its closely watched annual report in 1974. The total cost of dis ... more

Thousands without power as winds buffet Los Angeles
Los Angeles (AFP) Dec 27, 2007
Around 5,700 homes across Los Angeles were without power early Thursday as fierce winds gusted across the city, downing power lines and knocking over trees. Los Angeles Department of Water and Power officials said at one stage overnight more than 19,000 households were blacked out as winds packing gusts of up to 80 miles (130 kilometers) per hour wreaked havoc across a wide area. Nationa ... more

Indonesian court clears energy company over mud volcano
Jakarta (AFP) Dec 27, 2007
An Indonesian court on Thursday rejected a lawsuit brought by environmentalists against an energy company alleged to have caused a mud volcano that has displaced thousands in East Java province. The South Jakarta district court ruled that the mudflow in Sidoarjo district was a "natural disaster", and not caused by gas drilling by Lapindo Brantas as alleged by Friends of the Earth Indonesia. ... more

Search intensifies for Indonesian landslide victims
Tawangmangu, Indonesia (AFP) Dec 28, 2007
Rescue workers stepped up a hunt Friday for victims of landslides and floods that claimed scores of lives on Indonesia's Java island and displaced thousands, an official said. The landslides smashed through homes, burying families alive, in the early hours of Wednesday after monsoon rains lashed Central and East Java provinces this week and also triggered devastating floods. More than 1, ... more

Vietnam villagers ransack titanium mine site: reports
Hanoi (AFP) Dec 28, 2007
Hundreds of Vietnamese villagers have ransacked the site of a proposed titanium mine that they fear will pollute the soil and ground water, local officials and media reports said Friday. More than 300 protesters caused over 12,000 dollars in damage when they destroyed machinery and pipelines at the site near the seaside Tam Tien commune in central Quang Nam province last Sunday. Develope ... more

  whales:
  • Australian whaling demonstrators protest in Japanese consulate

    forest:
  • Indonesia: President urges better forest management amid floods

    china:
  • Activists attack China ruling on Hong Kong democracy
  •  
    Earth News, Earth Sciences, Climate Change, Energy Technology, Environment News  
    Snowstorms disrupt travel in central US
    Chicago (AFP) Dec 28, 2007
    Heavy snowstorms continued to disrupt travel in the central United States Friday and forecasters said little relief was expected until the New Year. More than 400 flights were cancelled and delays were averaging an hour and a half at Chicago's O'Hare airport as the storm system which crippled Denver on Thursday moved eastward. But the Chicago airport authority said there was no need yet ... more

    Japan opposes Taiwan's referendum, says PM Fukuda
    Beijing (AFP) Dec 28, 2007
    Tokyo opposes Taiwan's planned referendum on United Nations membership, Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda said on Friday after holding talks with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao. "We don't want a situation in which Taiwan's referendum leads to tensions between (the two sides)," said Fukuda, who is in China for a four-day visit. China and Taiwan split after a civil war in 1949 but China sti ... more

    'Croc-hunter' Irwin's family to campaign against Japanese whaling
    Sydney (AFP) Dec 27, 2007
    "Crocodile hunter" Steve Irwin's family plans a campaign against Japanese whaling to show that scientific data about whales can be obtained without killing them, the Australian's widow said Thursday. Terri Irwin said the project would be launched in 2008 through a whale watching business she bought after her husband's death last year. "We can actually learn everything the Japanese are le ... more

    Analysis: Fuel curbs China combat ability
    Hong Kong (UPI) Dec 28, 2007
    By calculating the amount of fuel oil required by the Chinese navy and air force in a large-scale attack across the Taiwan Strait under high-tech conditions, it becomes apparent that such an assault could not be sustained for an extended period. For an attack on Taiwan, China would likely mobilize 10 fighter divisions of the PLA air force. In fact, only one to two regiments under each d ... more

    Analysis: Iraq oil up end-'07, sketchy '08
    Washington (UPI) Dec 28, 2007
    Iraq's oil sector ends 2007 on a relatively upbeat note, with production at levels not seen since before the war. But the year had more downs than ups, and sustaining success through next year is far from guaranteed. Iraq averaged production of 2.4 million barrels per day in November, according to the global energy information firm Platts. That's nearly a half million more than the post ... more

      gas:
  • Analysis: Eye on Uzbek energy

    gas:
  • Outside View: Nabucco cut by Caspian line

    gas:
  • China says wants quick fix to East China Sea dispute with Japan

    nuclear-civil:
  • Russia delivers more nuclear fuel to Iran: official
  •  
    Energy News - Technology - Business - Environment  
    Outside View: Russia's Iran nuke role
    Moscow (UPI) Dec 28, 2007
    According to Zalmay Khalilzad, the permanent U.S. representative to the United Nations, the Iranian Six -- the United States, Russia, China and the European trio of Britain, France and Germany -- have at last reached a consensus. The situation around the Iranian nuclear file reads like a crime novel, especially in view of the latest surprise moves by Tehran. Iran has found an o ... more

    Outside View: EU goes Russian nuclear
    Moscow (UPI) Dec 28, 2007
    After the EU gave its approval for the Russian-Bulgarian agreement on building a nuclear power plant in the small Bulgarian town of Belene on the bank of the Danube, the two countries are in the starting blocks waiting for the main treaty to be signed in late January 2008. The European Union gave the OK for the nuclear project between Moscow and Sophia after a thorough review by expert ... more

    Clean coal plants mired by cost and delays
    Washington (UPI) Dec 27, 2007
    Clean coal-fired plants offer a cleaner fuel source but construction costs and increased greenhouse gas standards in the United States hamper their production. Regulators canceled, suspended or refused several plans to develop clean coal-fired plants citing construction costs, technological pitfalls and regulation regarding greenhouse gas emissions, USA Today said Thursday. Clean ... more

    France could provide Egypt with nuclear help: Sarkozy
    Cairo (AFP) Dec 28, 2007
    French President Nicolas Sarkozy says he is willing to help Egypt develop nuclear energy for peaceful use, the official MENA news agency reported Friday, quoting an interview with an Egyptian daily. Sarkozy said Paris could "collaborate with Egypt in nuclear energy for civilian use if Egypt wishes," MENA said, quoting excerpts of an interview to be published Saturday in the pro-government Al ... more

    Japan, China pledge warmer ties, but no deal on gas fields
    Beijing (AFP) Dec 28, 2007
    China and Japan pledged on Friday to build on their rapidly warming ties, as Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda met the Chinese leadership, but a dispute over maritime gas fields remained unresolved. Fukuda, on his first visit to China since taking office in September, held talks with President Hu Jintao to lay the groundwork for closer cooperation between the Asian powers in trade, climat ... more

    24/7 news coverage of Your world at War.  
      eo:
  • Outside View: Arctic satellite balance

    gps:
  • Putin wants satnav collar for dog: agency

    nuclear-doctrine:
  • Pakistan says India missile tests will trigger arms race

    superpowers:
  • Japan's Fukuda seeks to keep reconciling with China
  •  
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