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Speeding Up Mother Nature's Very Own CO2 Mitigation Process Livermore CA (SPX) Jan 21, 2011 Using seawater and calcium to remove carbon dioxide (CO2) in a natural gas power plant's flue stream, and then pumping the resulting calcium bicarbonate in the sea, could be beneficial to the oceans' marine life. Greg Rau, a senior scientist with the Institute of Marine Sciences at UC Santa Cruz and who also works in the Carbon Management Program at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, conducted a series of lab-scale experiments to find out if a seawater/mineral carbonate (limestone) gas scrubb ... read more |
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EU disarray makes it easy for carbon credits hackers Europe boasts that its control of polluting rights makes it a leading light in moves to save the planet, but patchwork national systems for trading carbon credits have simply left hackers licking their lips. ... more | .. |
Rising food prices spell trouble for Arabs Rising food prices, which triggered the downfall of the Tunisian regime and rioting in Algeria, threaten further trouble across the Middle East and North Africa, a region heavily dependent on food imports. ... more | .. |
German NGO denies corruption allegations The head of AGEF, a German aid group active in Afghanistan and Iraq, strongly denied corruption allegations against his group, calling them a "smear campaign." ... more | .. |
Africa's violent polls threaten stability Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation, faces a potentially divisive presidential election in April that could have immense ramifications across a continent where the notion of democracy is often little more than a thin veneer to mask brutal dictatorships. ... more |
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Fossil of mom with egg reveals Pterosaur's female form Her life came to a crashing end, but the fossil left by a flying reptile nicknamed Mrs T has shed light on what female pterosaurs looked like when they soared above Earth millions of years ago. ... more | .. |
Putting The Dead To Work For Conservation Biology Conservation paleobiologists-scientists who use the fossil record to understand the evolutionary and ecological responses of present-day species to changes in their environment - are putting the dea ... more | .. |
Toward Controlling Fungus That Caused Irish Potato Famine Scientists are reporting a key advance toward development of a way to combat the terrible plant diseases that caused the Irish potato famine and still inflict billions of dollars of damage to crops ... more | .. |
VIMS Team Glides Into Polar Research Researcher Walker Smith of the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, College of William and Mary, has been conducting shipboard studies of biological productivity in Antarctica's Ross Sea for the la ... more |
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Tunisian army emerges strong from people's revolt Tunisia's army has emerged from the month of unrest that toppled Zine El Abidine Ben Ali with its reputation burnished and the population full of praise after it refused to open fire on protesters. ... more | .. |
South Sudan eyes landslide to secede Organisers of south Sudan's landmark independence vote were collating the remaining preliminary results on Thursday, poised to return a landslide for secession after reaching the simple majority required on just 60 percent of the ballot. ... more | .. |
2010 warmest ever year, says UN weather agency The UN's World Meteorological Organisation said Thursday that 2010 was the warmest year on record, confirming a "significant" long-term trend of global warming and producing exceptional weather variations. ... more | .. |
Hu faces rough welcome in US Congress Chinese President Hu Jintao, challenged and feted at the White House Wednesday, faces a rougher welcome a day later from top US lawmakers who shunned his state dinner and branded him a "dictator." ... more |
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US plucks tiny daisy from brink of extinction The tiny Maguire daisy, which grows in the desert southwest of the United States, has been plucked from the edge of extinction after a 25-year conservation effort, US officials have announced. ... more | .. |
Are Sharks Color Blind Sharks are unable to distinguish colors, even though their close relatives rays and chimaeras have some color vision, according to new research by Dr. Nathan Scott Hart and colleagues from the Unive ... more | .. |
Two New Species Of Leaping Beetles Discovered In New Caledonia Only five species of these so-called 'flea' beetles, out of a global total of 60, had been found to date in New Caledonia, in the western Pacific. A three-year study has now enabled Spanish re ... more | .. |
Ouattara: West Africa ready to intervene in I.Coast West African armies are making preparations to invade Ivory Coast to overthrow strongman Laurent Gbagbo, his rival Alassane Ouattara claimed Wednesday in an interview with French daily La Croix. ... more |
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Residents moved from risk areas in Brazil disaster zone Brazilian officials began Wednesday moving thousands of people out of at-risk areas near Rio in a flooding disaster that has already left at least 727 people dead. ... more | .. |
Climate change study had 'significant error': experts A climate change study that projected a 2.4 degree Celsius increase in temperature and massive worldwide food shortages in the next decade was seriously flawed, scientists said Wednesday. ... more | .. |
Germany moves to head off more dioxin food scares The German cabinet approved a package of measures on Wednesday aimed at preventing a repeat of this month's damaging scare over dioxin poisoning in farm produce. ... more | .. |
Big City Life May Alter Green Attitudes People with good jobs found in large cities are more likely to engage in pro-environmental activities. So says a new study of China's environmental behavior published in the British journal Environm ... more |
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Airports must plan for snow storms: EU The European Commission warned airports on Wednesday of looming regulation to prevent a repeat of the Christmas travel chaos and demanded to see battle plans for next winter. ... more | .. |
Pirates hoist ransoms for hijacked ships Even piracy suffers from inflation. Somali pirates are reported to have hiked ransom demands for hijacked ships by as much as 60 percent in recent months. ... more | .. |
Oil Giant Plans New Platform Near Feeding Ground Of Critically Endangered Whale Sakhalin Energy Investment Company - part owned by Shell - has announced plans to build a major oil platform near crucial feeding habitat of the Western North Pacific gray whale population. On ... more | .. |
China farmers to get $15 bn subsidies amid drought China says it had earmarked about $15 billion in subsidies for millions of farmers who have been hit by a severe drought that has driven prices as the government tries to battle inflation. ... more |
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