China: Greener than you think
The common image of China as a big carbon polluter belies the clean energy miracle currently underway in the country, says Wu Changhua.
Source: New Scientist
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The common image of China as a big carbon polluter belies the clean energy miracle currently underway in the country, says Wu Changhua.
Source: New Scientist
Biotechnology is only one of a set of approaches needed to solve the world's problems, says an editorial in Nature Biotechnology.
Source: Nature Biotechnology
Climate-change reporting is woefully inadequate because too often editors lack interest and assign writers without expertise, says James Fahn.
Training tree fellers in forest management can cut tree damage and carbon emissions from degradation, argue Francis E. Putz and colleagues.
Source: PLoS Biology
22 July 2008 | EN
The environmental and social costs of producing biofuels on land can be avoided by farming seaweed, says Ricardo Radulovich.
Volunteer citizen scientists are an important resource — particularly for developing countries, argue Nigel Winser and Raghu Saxena.
25 April 2008 | EN
The UN has underestimated the technological challenges of stemming carbon emissions, say Roger Pielke Jr, Tom Wigley and Christopher Green.
Source: Nature
Based on current growth rates, China's carbon emissions will equal today's entire global output by 2030, warn Ning Zeng and colleagues.
Source: Science
The health sector must more closely consider the effects of climate change, write A. J. McMichael and colleagues in the British Medical Journal.
Source: British Medical Journal
The time is right for Europe to change its carbon trading rules, giving Africa access to the market, writes Louis V. Verchot.
7 December 2007 | EN
Dryland farmers are growing novel crops for biofuel, but domestication and research into yields and pests is still needed, says William Dar.
Strong international policies are needed to stop the biofuel revolution threatening food security for the poor, says Siwa Msangi.
Biofuel production offers a lifeline to sugar-producing countries hit by the European Union's 2006 sugar reforms, argues Maureen Wilson.
Biofuels offer huge potential, but pose challenges best countered with strong and coherent development policies, says S. Arungu-Olende.
The Kyoto Protocol has failed to tackle climate change and needs a radical rethink, argue Gwyn Prins and Steve Rayner.
Source: Nature
Environmental groups should buy palm oil plantations to fund biodiversity-saving nature reserves, say Lian Pin Koh and David S. Wilcove.
Source: Nature
To meet the challenge of climate change, Indian scientists need more imagination and vigour, and to stop playing safe, says Sunita Narain.
Source: Business Standard
For Africans, there has been no justice so far in global action against climate change, argues Chukwumerije Okereke.
1 August 2007 | EN
Collecting comprehensive national and regional data could thwart the spread of malaria in Africa as conditions warm, argues Suad Sulaiman.
1 August 2007 | EN
African leaders need to stop ignoring climate change and incorporate mitigation and adaptation policies into development, argues Anthony Nyong.
1 August 2007 | EN