Saturday, 20 October 2007

Gore, scientists share Nobel Peace Prize





By ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS, Associated Press Writer
Fri, 12 Oct 2007 21:00:35 GMT

GENEVA - Plenty of people share the glory of the Nobel Peace Prize — thousands of scientists have been studying and documenting climate change under a U.N. body set up in 1988 as concerns grew about global warming. And they hope the award will help — or prod — governments to do more to curb global warming or avert disasters on the scale of a Hurricane Katrina or the deadly effects of the 2003 heat wave that killed up to 35,000 people in Europe.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, named co-winner with former Vice President Al Gore in Oslo on Friday, has been cranking out reports that have built up knowledge "about the connection between human activities and global warming," said the Nobel prize committee.
"Mother Nature keeps helping us along because the evidence just keeps piling up," said Kevin Trenberth, a lead author on the 1995, 2001 and 2007 reports.
Trenberth, the New Zealand-born head of the climate analysis section at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., said he hopes the prize increases the impact of the explanations he and other scientists give to audiences ranging from town hall meetings to Congress.
"All the scientists that have contributed to the work of the IPCC are the Nobel laureates who have been recognized and acknowledged by the Nobel Prize Committee," said Rajendra Pachauri, the Indian engineer who chairs the panel.
"They should feel deeply encouraged and inspired. It is their contribution which has been recognized," said Pachauri. "I only happen to be a functionary that essentially oversees the process."
Leo Meyer, a climate and energy specialist with the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, said the award underscores the panel's role in encouraging policy makers to address the problem of climate change.
"There is still an important task of better explaining the findings of IPCC to a larger audience and this Nobel Prize of course helps to underline the credibility of the IPCC reports," Meyer told the AP.
Piers Forster from the School of Earth and Environment at England's University of Leeds said in a statement: "It's every scientist's dream to win a Nobel Prize, so this is great for myself and the hundreds that worked on their reports over the years. It's perhaps a little deflating though — that one man and his PowerPoint show has as much influence as the decades of dedicated work by so many scientists."

Thursday, 18 October 2007

DO YOU KNOW YOUR OWN CARBON FOOTPRINT?


The single most important thing you can do this year is an environmental audit of your business; find out how many tons of CO2 you currently release into the atmosphere. With that knowledge you can work out the best, most cost effective ways of reducing it and building the new, low carbon economy.
Julie’s Bicycle has appointed a team of environmental auditors who can provide environmental audits – or we can recommend other companies to do this. Don’t think of it as a cost – think of it as a long term investment in energy savings.
The audit is a five step process which includes (1) an initial meeting (2) a site visit (3) a report (4) developing your next steps and (5) a follow up meeting 6-12 months later. . Our focus is on energy use, water, transportation and travel, waste disposal and recycling, and purchasing.
Julie’s Bicycle is committed to supporting the whole industry in its efforts to tackle climate change. Sign up and register at http://www.juliesbicycle.com/ or call Alison Tickell on 07817 270711, or email us on juliesbicycle@yahoo.co.uk.