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There has never been a greater need for inquisitive and determined young minds to develop the solutions needed for the 21st Century
 
 
"My message to any young person today mulling over their future career path is this: there has never been a better time to consider a future in scientific discovery; or in engineering to bring innovative technologies to real world application."

The environmental problems facing the world in the 21st Century are the legacy of human activities, argues Sir David King. But he says, in this week's Green Room, we also hold the key to solving these problems by attracting the brightest young minds into the world of science.

Woman covering her mouth in polluted street (Image: AFP)
It is easy in our day-to-day lives to believe we are detached from the wider environment, but that is an illusion

Mankind has never had a greater need for science, and for the spark of human ingenuity to apply this to tackling today's great global challenges.

Built on centuries of tradition and endeavour, the UK is second to none in the diversity and excellence of its scientific heritage.

Our nation punches well above its weight in the quality and number of academic papers and citations, above Germany, France and Japan, and trailing only the far bigger economy of the US.

It is vital therefore that we pay equal regard to ensuring that the UK's outstanding scientific outputs flow through to enhance the quality of life and prosperity for people in the UK, and beyond.

The challenges facing science, and humanity, as we move through the 21st Century are manifold. I would place none higher than the test we face in our stewardship of planet Earth.

Even with our best efforts, we must be prepared for further global temperature rise as a result of past emissions

It is a stern test, as demonstrated by a few stark facts. From around three billion people on the planet in 1950, global population has risen to over six billion today. By the middle of this century, it will exceed nine billion.

Most future population growth will be in the developing world, where people quite reasonably aspire to the living standards enjoyed today by "western societies", such as our own.

Yet it is estimated that, even with today's population, we would need the resources of three planets for people across the world to imitate western lifestyles.

Climate signals

I do not advocate a hairshirt future, but clearly we need to find new ways to develop both our lifestyles and the planet we share.

A flooded road (Image: AFP)
Negative impacts will dominate in all regions, says Sir David

It is easy in our day-to-day lives to believe we are detached from the wider environment, but that is an illusion.

Climate change presents us with a particular stringent test, which unmitigated will magnify many of the existing scourges of mankind: famine, drought, flood, disease and conflict.

The scientific evidence is compelling beyond any reasonable doubt that unless we very radically transform our economies to reduce greenhouse emissions to a fraction of current levels then future generations will reap a heavy price.

Indeed, the signals are already with us of the sort of changes that we can expect to continue and accelerate, as land ice melts, sea levels rise and extreme weather events become more severe.

Even with our best efforts, we must be prepared for further global temperature rise as a result of past emissions, and the climate impacts associated with this. The outcome will initially be mixed, with positive and negative effects depending where in the world you live and on other factors.

But in time the negative impacts will dominate in all regions, and will fall earliest and heaviest on the poorest countries, which are least able to adapt and which have contributed least to the problem.

Car exhaust pipe (Image: PA)
Carbon levels in the atmosphere continue to rise

It will take an unprecedented international effort if we are to avoid the most dangerous climate changes that are predicted, and for individual countries to adapt to those impacts it is already too late for us to avoid.

From climate change I move to another linked challenge - energy. Since the industrial revolution, fossil fuels have powered our economies and brought new levels of prosperity.

But by releasing into the atmosphere carbon, as carbon dioxide, that has been naturally sequestered underground over tens to hundreds of millions of years, we have raised concentration levels in the atmosphere in just 150 years beyond anything seen for at least one million years, and probably far longer.

At the same time, world energy demand is expected to rise by half as much again by 2030.

Even with a major push on energy efficiency, there is a critical need for step changes in the pace at which we deploy current low-carbon technologies in developed and developing countries alike; and we must quickly advance the more innovative technologies such as carbon capture and storage, wave and tidal power, and solar photovoltaics.

No quick fix

There are no simple solutions and there is certainly no single "silver bullet" technological fix. The pathway for advancing new energy technologies to technical and economic viability at scale is complex, difficult and inevitably takes time, even with major efforts to accelerate progress.

The £1bn public/private Energy Technology Institute, launched by the UK Government, is an important new initiative in this area, providing good starting levels of investment, focus and ambition, and I hope in time will develop as part of a global network of similar centres of excellence.

Students in a laboratory (Image: Science Photo Library)
There has never been a greater need for inquisitive and determined young minds to develop the solutions needed for the 21st Century

Nor can we tackle the problem by focusing on one sector alone. It is not a question of whether we should reduce emissions from our vehicles, or our houses, or industry, or in aviation or shipping, or through curbing deforestation.

The scale of the challenge is such that we must do all of these things, whilst using our actions as a stimulus to galvanise the wider international response.

And we must continue to prosper, not just for our own sakes but because those we seek to influence will not follow our lead if they perceive that environmental sustainability means economic decline.

It is a powerful demonstration that in the UK we have been able to grow our economy in real terms by around half since 1990, whilst greenhouse gas emissions have fallen by 15%. Action is affordable and is the pro-growth strategy. It is inaction that we cannot afford.

Returning to where I began, science and technological innovation must be at the heart of the UK's approach as we tackle these and other of the great national and global challenges we face in the century ahead. But science does need to be redirected to meet these challenges.

Sir David King is the UK Government's chief scientific adviser and author of this opinion piece running in THE GREEN ROOM, a BBC News website.
 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6596427.stm


Published On: 5/3/2007
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By Martin Patience
BBC News website, Rehovot

 

Sitting in his book-lined office, Professor Jacob Karni likes to quote the French novelist Jules Verne.

"Yes, my friends," says Prof Karni, director of the Centre for Energy Research at the Weizmann Institute of Science, quoting from Verne's 1874 novel The Mysterious Island.

Harnessing solar energy cost-effectively is the aim of research

"I foresee that in the future, water will be used as fuel... water will be the coal of the future."

The professor enthuses about the French author's vision 130 years ago that the world's reliance on fossil fuels is unsustainable.

But he disagrees with Verne, famous for 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, in one fundamental respect.

Whereas the French writer saw water as the fuel for the future, the Israeli scientist says the future lies with solar energy.

Suntan

"Even if we were to dam every river in the world and put wind turbines where ever there is wind," says Prof Karni, "it wouldn't be enough to provide for our energy needs. But with solar energy we could meet the world's energy demands."

We will only find the solution when it's really urgent
Prof Karni
For the last 16 years, he has worked with colleagues at the Weizmann Institute, situated in a leafy campus in the Israeli city of Rehovot, to make renewable energy a viable alternative.

The professor, who regularly works a 12-hour day, researches how to harness solar energy in a cost effective way and then transport the energy to the user.

The institute has been researching solar panels that produce a greater yield of energy.

"One of the big problems with solar energy is that the energy is very diluted," says Prof Karni. "It can give you a suntan but not much else."

Snags ahead

But one of Prof Karni's projects has been to use solar energy to produce a non-polluting synthetic fuel that could be used, for example, to power cars.

Environmental activists use solar grill to cook sausages in Moscow
Solar power is finding various other uses worldwide
Last summer, the Weizmann Institute published research that was "a step towards the solution", he says.

Using solar power energy, zinc oxide was heated to 1,200C. The temperature splits the ore, releasing oxygen and creating gaseous zinc, which is then condensed into powder.

When the zinc powder reacts with water, it produces hydrogen that could power a car.

The chemical reaction produces no greenhouse gases and the zinc oxide can be recycled into zinc and the process starts all over again.

Prof Karni says that the research demonstrated that the process is achievable, but problems remain.

For every kilogram of hydrogen gas produced, you would need 60 kg of zinc, which is not feasible on a large scale, he insists.

 

New Manhattan Project?

But with a map of China hanging in his office, Prof Karni insists we have to think big.

"We could put solar panels here," he says, pointing at west China, "and this could provide the energy for the east of China where most people live. We just need to devise an effective way to transport the energy."

The massive consumption in global energy coupled with rising pollution has made finding a renewable energy alternative more important, he declares.

Over 3.5 billion people live in countries where the consumption of energy more than doubled from 1990 to 2003, according to the Energy Information Administration.

If countries were to form a "Manhattan project" for solar energy, employing the best minds and ploughing enormous resources into research, renewable energy could be challenging fossil fuels in five years, the professor believes.

But that moment of reckoning has yet to arrive.

"We will only find the solution when it's really urgent," he says.

NEWS FROM :
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4719334.stm
 


Published On: 5/3/2007
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My Journal: bikes time i guess
By: jibbe


whippin this thang this yurrr to stay fresh and fast. so fresh i got an expiry. bbc stikers ya hurrd custom blue on white shi*t





Published On: 4/29/2007
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If the BBC news did start in a rave way like Bill Bailey mentions then I might watch it more often although their theme tune does mix in well to the apocalyptic rave
 
 
If you want to know what the original BBC news theme tune sounds like its here:
 


Published On: 4/15/2007
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Published On: 6/3/2006
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Maria Full of Grace Paper


    We watched a movie entitled Maria Full of Grace. It is about a young girl who is living in a small town in Colombia. She first works as a rose cutter. Maria live with her sister, her mother and her sister’s baby. Maria starts off with a boyfriend, they are having un-protected sex and Maria ends up getting pregnant. One of her fears is she doesn’t want to end up like her sister, living with just the baby and her family. No father. So she try’s to talk to her boyfriend about staying with her and her baby. He doesn’t like this idea. Then at her job she kept requesting to go to the bathroom because she was sick and her boss granted permission the first few times then started saying no. So she got sick on the flowers and he got mad. Maria didn’t like the way he treated her so she quit. Maria was the only source of income for her small broken family. And then with her being pregnant she needed to find work. She went to a dance with some of her friends one night and met a guy, he treated her much better than her own boyfriend. He was the one who introduced her to this job.
    He told her the job paid very well so she agreed to check it out because she needed money so desperately. He takes her to this bar and she sees a women about her age walking out of this mans office. Maria was next so she stepping in and the man started asking her questions about her age, family and the condition her stomach is in. She told him she was eighteen but really she is seventeen but she feared her would turn her down because she may have been too young. She also tells the man that her stomach is in perfect condition which is not true because she was pregnant. Her best friend finds out that Maria got this job so she decided to be a mule as well for whatever reason. When they arrived in New York a women they were with was caught and so was Maria but they had no proof because they couldn’t give her an x-ray because of her pregnancy.  It turns out she is working with the women she saw walk out of the office and her name is Lucy. On their trip to New York (where Lucy’s sister lives) a pellet bursts in Lucy’s stomach and she dies. Maria and her friend go and stay with Lucy’s sister. In the end her friend goes back to Mexico but Maria decides last minute to stay and raise her son in the United States.
    These types of stories happen in real life more than you may expect. I found a story about a women named “Porota”. (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/779728.stm)  This is not her real name, the article said they couldn’t release it for fear of her safety. She has three children who live in Columbia with a very strict uncle. Porota was caught because the man she was traveling with was caught lying about never being to the UK. He was asking for places to stay and when they searched him they found an address so they knew he was not here on vacation. Since Porota was with him she was searched too, not only did she have pellets in her stomach but had hidden some in her vagina, this is how she was discovered.
    She is now serving eight years in prison and as of Thursday June eighth in year 2000 she was serving her fifth year. So now she is out and back in Colombia with her children. But in this interview she said that if she could turn back the clock she would and make the decision to find money some other way. She hated not being able to speak to her children, she said that she only spoke to them three times in four years and fears they think she abandoned them. They already did not have a father so Porota was playing the roll of mother and father. Her children thought she was working in England. But now they know the truth because she told them as soon as she arrived home. The reason she carried the drugs was because she wanted her children to have a better life than she did, she didn’t want them to suffer as much hardship as she did. They never asked for that life it was just the life she wanted for them.
    Porota’s story is a lot like Maria’s. Porota wanted a better life for her kids and Maria wanted to provide that kind of life for the family she had and then the child she was going to have. Maria was not caught unlike Porota but she would have been if she wasn’t pregnant. Also Porota was traveling with other people who were also mules and so was Maria. She was with three other women, one of which got caught and the other died and the remaining one was her best friend. Porota said that she regretted the decision she made about becoming a drug mule and if she could go back in time she wouldn’t have made the same choice. Because of what it put her children through. I think Maria regretted her decision as well because she decided to stay in the United States. I imagine that she planned to have and raise her baby there. She made an appointment at a doctor’s office there to get a sonar thing. So obviously she wasn’t going back to Colombia so therefore she wasn’t going to travel with drugs again.
    One thing that Porota and Maria have in common is the people they were working with both promised that they wouldn’t get caught and they were ready to do this. They made the girls feel confident nothing would go wrong and were very comforting. Of corse they were going to be though. If they weren’t the girls would probably just quit right then because if the employee doesn’t feel confident in the job then they would not act confident and most likely get caught. Porota said that the person she was working for made her practice by swallowing grapes and things as big as that. In the movie we saw Maria try and swallow grapes as well. She had great difficulty with it, she kept on gagging and spitting it back out. I didn’t think she was going to be able to do it. But then when it came to actually having to swallow fifty or sixty pills she did it. They guys also helped her like they soaked the pellets in wax (as a coat for it to go down smoother and so their stomach acids wouldn’t tear it up) and they sprayed her throat with something to numb it I think. Overall Maria regretted her decision and stayed in America and Porota definitely regretted it because she spent eight years in prison and couldn’t see her kids.

Published On: 4/8/2006
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Well first off let me just state this right now, I've been god damn annoyed with this site all week. I've attempted multiple times to blog some seriously good stuff and all that keeps happening is a process that tells me the window is blank.

Last real blog was a freak out of Nathan coming to town. I got real drunk with some friends during dinner and then met up with him at the one and only Snafu, Eugene's new gay club. Thats where a friend of ours was spinning records. I dance with any and everybody and Bubbles and I had our selves allot of Hetero PDA's. So after all that stressing, I ended up having a great time.

This past weekend more Portland cats rolled down. I hadn't really slept a whole night (meaning past 7 hours) since Wednesday maybe? And Thurs, Fri, and Saturday never went to sleep until at least 6 in the morning. Its weird when after hours bar kids go party hoping around 2:30 do some after hours dancing manage around 5 to think that some type of 24 Mexican joint won't hurt and wake up with a pabst by the bed. Seriously this is soo college.

Saturday though I hurt myself because I thought since I had troubles with sleeping why not just take a Tylonal PM while I'm slothin around watching movies... and the Grizzly man (by the way I feel like a horrbile human being for finding it a little humerous at times such as "Ghost give me back my hat or I'm gonna expload" oh that poor Tim guy)
Anyway I mention this because I never let the PM do its job after slothin coffee sounded good and after coffee drinkin sounded good. This later left me at a dance party where random body parts were surely falling asleep.

Anyway good times, I hadn't been out in a while and by that I mean to house party- dance parties. Oregon has really shown me some interesting stuff but mostly its taught me not to be typical but not to be "scene" or "hipster" I don't know people up here are smarter and their creativity shines through, even when we are all just "getting out there"


This is a link to a lovely little article aptly titlled Goat Ravisher that made me laugh my pants off, America made such a huge ass deal of Broke Back Mountain....

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4748292.stm

Check it out, GET IN THERE


Published On: 2/28/2006
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In light of all the election/political chat of late on the list. I felt some
might like to see this. It was clipped from BBC News online:

Bolivia leader halves his own pay - Mr Morales says he wants to share the burden of the poor.  The Bolivian new left-wing President, Evo Morales, has cut his salary by more than a half to a little over $1,800 (?1,012) per month. The decision means that the salaries of all Bolivian public sector employees will be reviewed, as no official can earn more than the president.  Mr Morales said the money saved would be used to increase the numbers of doctors and teachers.  Mr Morales suggested that members of Congress should cut their salaries too.  During the campaign, Mr Morales had pledged to halve his own pay if elected.  The move was announced after his first cabinet went beyond that, with a cut of 57%.  BBC South America correspondent Daniel Schweimler says many voted for Mr Morales believing that he was different from the more conservative politicians who have governed in the past.  The former llama herder and coca leaf farmer was inaugurated last Sunday as Bolivia's first indigenous president.  He has promised to fight corruption, introduce a new tax on the wealthy, and renationalise energy companies.

Something to think about...

Published On: 2/1/2006
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My Journal: 14/7/2004
By: BadBoyB


Hey peeps.

my friends were on radio 1 last night, guest mix on the dreem teem show... check it out!!!

Respect to Dan and Conan from liquid People... I have been telling you people these boys are the dogs...

www.bbc.co.uk/radio/aod/radio1_aod.shtml?r1dreemteem

Enjoy :o)



Published On: 7/14/2004
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