Saturday 22 December 2018

FLOODS

HI ALL,

Lately  I can see we talk more and more about flooding, storms and disasters happening due to the strong and unpredictable weather conditions as never before. 
The images that follow have been taken from the news of the last few months, in fact floods have been reported all over the world:

Italy: Treviso, Venice, Rome - October 2018
Spain: Malaga, Mayorca - October 2018
France - August 2018
US: Washington, Arizona - July 2018
South East Asia: Bangladesh ,India Myanmar - June 2018


Could they be linked to global warning, tree cutting and the conquer over the natural environment?

... have a thought!! 





































Further information can be found at:

https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2018/07/24/heavy-rainfall-causes-severe-northeast-flooding/825060002/
http://www.ansa.it/sito/notizie/cronaca/2018/10/30/maltempo-piave-verso-esondazione_a789689b-fb4d-40b0-bdf9-0d2f0d2dacb9.html
https://www.theguardian.com/weather/2018/oct/30/water-rises-to-three-feet-in-st-marks-basilica-after-venice-floods
https://watchers.news/2018/10/22/malaga-flood-spain-october-2018/
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-45134715
https://majorcadailybulletin.com/news/local/2018/10/10/53397/six-confirmed-dead-after-devastating-flash-floods.html
https://www.bbc.co.uk/weather/features/44540598

Saturday 8 December 2018

NATIONAL TREE WEEK 2018


Successful tree planting for Wandsworth during the National Tree Week 2018.

Thank you to St'Anne Primary School and Tree Wardens for taking part in it and helping out on the day.









 
 


Saturday 24 November 2018

THE 6,000 YEARS OLD BAOBAB

Baobabs grow in arid regions such as Madagascar, Africa, Arabia and Australia. In the early 21 century African baobabs suffered a disease which killed lots of them and dehydration cause by the global warming just accelerated the process.


Among the many Baobabs that are present in this world there are some which have a very long life, in particular in in South Africa where it is possible to find a 6 thousands years old Baobab which hold a pub inside itself. Its height 22 metres and its circumference reach almost 50 metres: it is considered the biggest ever!!

This video will explain its story in details:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPeF-OqTf5g





Hope you will enjoy this view!!





https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adansonia

Monday 5 November 2018

SEVERE WEATHER IN ITALY WIPES OUT THOUSANDS OF TREES

https://www.facebook.com/cnninternational/videos/308055076589228/

Very impressive images that highlight the strength of the nature!

This catastrophe happen and an area very closed to my home town and therefore very upsetting for me!!
Please share!
























Tuesday 23 October 2018

THE AMAZON IS IN DANGER AS NEVER BEFORE

Hello All,

Recently I read this news about the Amazon Rain Forest which denounce how trees are still being cut uncontrollably. 

I found this information VERY disturbing, and what it really upsets me is the fact that local authorities are not doing enough to protect this rare treasure.















Accordingly to the latest researches conducted by Institute for Man and the Environment of the Amazon (Imazon), it seems that in March 2018 the deforestation rate in the Amazon increased of almost 250% compared to the same period of the 2017. I personally consider this data very alarming!!

The deforestation involves the states that surround the Amazon such as Mato Grosso (which counts for almost half of the trees cutting), Roraima, Para’, Amazonas and Rondionia, and this study declares that the issues lays on private ownership. 
In fact, the lands involved in the deforestation are not State property and therefore the authorities have difficulties in controlling them.
A different evaluation conducted by Soy Moratorium, support this savage trees cutting and it reports the need to cut trees in order to create land for soybeans crops for the local residents. Also, the agrarian reforms implemented in the last few years have supported this trend. 

It seems that the local Amazon administrations consider and evaluate mainly the opinion of the INPE (National Institute for Space Research) which sustains the complete opposite and affirms that nowadays Brazil is having the lowest rate of deforestation since the last twenty years.

Despite the fact the Google Earth Engine platform helps to monitor the deforestation and the forest degradation, the Brazilian authorities do not seem to take into consideration those data. The images not only reveal that the deforestation has increase of about ten times since 2017 but also the degradation of the forest has increase of a third as well.

As a result, there is a huge discrepancy on information, data and numbers and the only one who suffer in this limbo of miscommunication is the Amazon.

I am very disappointed about this brutal exploitation of the natural resources and I urge anyone who can advise me how I can help to preserve this piece of paradise to please contact me.



I want to save this green lung!!




For further information please visit the following websites:
http://conexaoplaneta.com.br/blog/desmatamento-na-amazonia-em-marco-e-243-maior-do-que-mesmo-periodo-do-ano-passado/

https://oglobo.globo.com/sociedade/sustentabilidade/devastacao-da-amazonia-aumentou-195-em-marco-de-2015-15910480

https://landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov/brazil-reports-lowest-rate-of-amazonian-deforestation-in-two-decades/



Sunday 23 September 2018

OZONE HOLE & CHINA INSULATION: WHAT'S THE LINK?






I will report here below an article that I recently found in the BBC World News which questions the possible links between the home insulation used in China and the diminish of the ozone layer.

Very interesting reading!!




"Cut-price Chinese home insulation is being blamed for a massive rise in emissions of a gas, highly damaging to the Earth's protective ozone layer.
The Environmental Investigations Agency (EIA) found widespread use of CFC-11 in China, even though the chemical was fully banned back in 2010. Scientists have been extremely puzzled by the mysterious rise in emissions. But this report suggests the key source is China's home construction industry. Just two months ago, researchers published a study showing that the expected decline in the use of CFC-11 after it was completely banned eight years ago had slowed to a crawl. There were suspicions among researchers that new supplies were being made somewhere in East Asia. Rumours were rife as to the source. There was a concern among some experts that the chemical was being used to secretly enrich uranium for use in nuclear weapons.
The reality it seems is more about insulation than proliferation. 

* Electric car points in all new homes planned 
*Exoskelotons promise superhuman powers
* Can we save the Lord of the Ring toad?

So why is this important? What can be done about this? What is the ozone layer and why is it important? Remind me how the hole in ozone layer came about? So what did the world do about this? I thought the ozone hole was recovering?
CFC-11 makes a very efficient "blowing agent" for polyurethane foam, helping it to expand into rigid thermal insulation that's used in houses to cut energy bills and reduce carbon emissions. Researchers from the EIA, a green campaign group, contacted foam manufacturing factories in 10 different provinces across China. From their detailed discussions with executives in 18 companies, the investigators concluded that the chemical is used in the majority of the polyurethane insulation the firms produce. One seller of CFC-11 estimated that 70% of China's domestic sales used the illegal gas. The reason is quite simple - CFC-11 is better quality and much cheaper than the alternatives. The authorities have banned CFC-11 but enforcement of the regulation is poor."We were absolutely gobsmacked to find that companies very openly confirmed using CFC-11 while acknowledging it was illegal," Avipsa Mahapatra from EIA told BBC News. "The fact that they were so blasé about it, the fact that they told us very openly how pervasive it is in the market, these were shocking findings for us." The EIA says that its estimates of the amount of the gas being used in China are in the middle of the emissions range calculated by scientists in their report in May. The scientist who first highlighted the problem with CFC-11 said the EIA findings seemed plausible, although it was difficult to be definitive.
Dr Stephen Montzka from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) told BBC News: "The pervasiveness of the use of CFC-11 that seems apparent in China based on their survey is quite amazing, although it is hard for me to assess the accuracy of the emission estimate they make to know if it is indeed likely that this activity can explain all or most of what we are observing in the global atmosphere."
This is a big deal because of the amount of the dodgy chemical being used and its potential to reverse the healing that's starting to take place in the ozone layer. China's polyurethane foam makes up about one-third of global production, so if they are predominantly using an ozone-depleting substance it will set back the closing of the ozone hole by a decade or more. As well as the ozone layer, CFC-11 has a warming impact. Researchers estimate that if the use of the chemical continues, it would be the equivalent of CO₂ from 16 coal-fired power stations every year! As China is a signatory of the Montreal Protocol that governs the use of ozone-depleting substances, it should be possible to put trade sanctions in place. However, since the protocol was signed in 1987, this weapon of last resort has never been used and it's not expected in this case.
What's more likely is that China will be encouraged to crack down on the production of CFC-11s and to launch a full-scale investigation with the support of the Montreal Protocol secretariat. "It is critical for the government of China not to treat these as isolated incidents," said Avipsa Mahapatra from the EIA. "We want them to clamp down but it's supremely important for them to carry out a comprehensive investigation into the sector. It has to result in seizures, it has to result in arrests so that people know there are harsh penalties for the production of CFC-11." Delegates to the Montreal Protocol are meeting this week in Vienna and they will try to come up with a plan to tackle the issue. 
Ozone is formed in the stratosphere some 15 to 30 km above the surface of the Earth by the interaction of solar ultraviolet radiation with oxygen in the air. In this location, the newly formed ozone absorbs ultraviolet radiation, preventing most of it from reaching the ground. This is important because ultraviolet radiation can lead to skin cancer and eye damage in humans, can damage crops and marine life. Scientists discovered in 1985, much to their surprise, that there was a 30% drop in ozone levels over Antarctica in October of that year. By 1992, the hole was as large as North America. 
What was happening was that chemicals called chlorofluorocarbons contained in refrigeration, air conditioning, packaging, insulation, solvents, and aerosol propellants were releasing chlorine or bromine molecules when they were exposed to intense UV light in the stratosphere. When chlorine and bromine atoms come into contact with ozone, they destroy the molecules. One chlorine atom can destroy over 100,000 ozone molecules before it is removed from the stratosphere. Ozone can be destroyed more quickly than it is naturally created. For once, the world acted speedily and to good effect. Most nations, including the chemical industry, signed up to the Montreal Protocol which quickly banned most of the worst-offending chemicals. Developing countries were given much longer to replace the gases. So while most of the richer countries got rid of CFC-11 in the mid-1990s, China and others were expected to completely get rid of it in 2010. That obviously hasn't happened just yet. Back in 2014 researchers reported the first signs of a thickening in the ozone layer. At that point they said it would take a decade for the hole to start to shrink but by September 2015 scientists found that the hole was approximately 4 million sq km smaller than it was in the year 2000 - that's an area the size of India.
All this was due to the global phase out of CFCs. So it was a major surprise to ozone experts to find that the expected decline in these elements in the air had stalled. And now, according to the EIA, the reason behind the slowdown has been discovered - and it's mainly down to Chinese builders!"

Full article can be found at:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-44738952

Thursday 6 September 2018

KENYAN INNOVATION TAKES PLASTIC BAGS OUT OF FORESTRY


Hello All,

please find here below an article I recently found in a BBC link which was talking about plastic pollution and reforestation.
Kenya already banned the use of plastic bags in 2017, what are we waiting for?

Great highlights and new points of view form Kenya, enjoy the reading!!





"KENYAN INNOVATION TAKES PLASTIC BAGS OUT OF FORESTRY

Plastic bags are known for their environmental impact. They slowly release toxic chemicals once in the soil, for instance, and find their way into the guts of animals that often choke and die as a result.

Kenya banned the use of plastic bags in 2017. And thanks to a 43-year old Kenyan, Teddy Kinyanjui, an innovative afforestation and reforestation method for developing seedlings without using plastic bags is in place.



A resident of Nairobi and founder of Cookswell Jikos Limited, Kinyanjui has invented small, portable seed balls to grow and easily disperse seedlings. He is working in partnership with Kenya Forestry Research Institute (KEFRI), which certifies seeds.This photo gallery shows Kinyanjui’s ingenuity in using the seed balls instead of the usual plastic bags.

When tree seedlings are grown in plastic bags in a nursery, he explains, the roots get squeezed and this limits their ability to grow fast. The seed ball method enables roots to adapt easily, with less disturbance.
Kinyanjui says he has engineered a method of coating each seed with charcoal dust, and corn or cassava starch, to bind each ball so the seeds are protected from prey, pests and diseases.


He says he has the capacity to make one tonne of the seed balls per day. So far, since the project’s initiation in 2016, about one million seeds of different species of certified indigenous trees have been dispersed throughout Kenya through partnerships with locals and with a germination rate of 60 per cent.
“People use charcoal every day, necessitating for more trees. Climate change has also caused community conflicts, especially among pastoralists in Northern Kenya who fight over pasture for their animals,” says Kinyajui. “Good environmental management is, therefore, crucial for peace among these communities.”

He hopes to partner with like-minded organisations and youth who herd livestock with slings to disperse more seeds in arid lands.

“We would [also] like people to see the value of this simple technology
 as a contributing factor in combating and adapting to effects of climate change, as this is the cheapest way to encourage tree planting, especially in arid and semi-arid areas,” adds Kinyanjui."



Full article can be found:
https://www.scidev.net/global/environment/multimedia/kenyan-innovation-takes-plastic-bags-out-of-forestry.html

Tuesday 21 August 2018

HOW TO GREEN THE WORLD'S DESERTS AND REVERSE CLIMATE CHANGE | Allan Savory


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vpTHi7O66pI


This video is from a TED talk of the 2013 and it perfectly explains how we can fight the deserts expansion in our beloved planet Earth. 

Absolutely great!! 💗

Have a look and tell me what you think!!



Thank you Allan Savory!!




Friday 3 August 2018

THE LONG HOT SUMMER

Hello All,I would like to report another article from "The Economist" which hightlight the consequence that this constant increasing heath of the globe is causing to many countries, not only to the natural environment but also economically and financially.Enjoy the reading and let me know what you think!!"Heat is causing problems across the worldWorryingly, such weather events may not remain unusual

SODANKYLA, a town in Finnish Lapland just north of the Arctic Circle, boasts an average annual temperature a little below freezing. Residents eagerly await the brief spell in July when the region enjoys something akin to summer. This year they may have wished for a bit less of it. On July 18th thermometers showed 32.1°C (89.8°F), which is 12°C warmer than typical for the month and the highest since records began in 1908. But Sodankyla is not the only place that is sizzling.
Wildfires have killed at least 80 people near Athens. Sweden has suffered a rash of forest fires, sparked by unusually hot and dry weather. Britain and the Netherlands look more parched than they did in 1976, one of the driest summers on record. Some 80,000 hectares of forest are burning in Siberia. Japan has declared its heatwave to be a natural disaster. On the night of July 7th, the temperature in downtown Los Angeles did not drop below 26.1°C. That seems positively nippy compared with Quriyat in Oman, which recorded a 24-hour minimum temperature of 42.6°C a few days earlier.
Heatwaves bring problems, especially in the developing world. Crops are ravaged, food spoils and workers become less productive. Studies have linked rising temperatures to violent crime and civil strife. And heat can kill on its own. In 2003 more than 70,000 Europeans may have died as a direct result of an infernal summer.
That was seen as a once-a-millennium heatwave at the time. By comparison, notes Geert Jan van Oldenborgh of the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute, outside of northern Europe the summer of 2018 looks unremarkable, so far, in terms of temperature. The Netherlands, for instance, can expect scorchers every couple of years. Except, he adds, a century ago that might have been once every 20 years. A few years back, a team led by Peter Stott of Britain’s Met Office calculated that, by 2012, summers like the one in 2003 would be expected to occur not every 1,000 years but every 127.
Hot times ahead
No consequence of global warming is as self-evident as higher temperatures. Earth is roughly 1°C hotter today than it was before humanity started belching greenhouse gases into the atmosphere during the Industrial Revolution. If this so-called thermodynamic effect were all there was to it, temperatures now considered unusually hot would become more typical and those regarded as uncommonly cold, uncommoner still. But climate being a complicated thing, there is more to it.
Weather patterns can change because the colder poles warm faster than balmier lower latitudes. As the thermal difference between the two diminishes, so does the velocity of the jet stream, a westerly wind which blows at an altitude of around 10km. That means the weather it carries can stay in place for longer. Sometimes, it offsets the thermodynamic effects, leading to cooler temperatures than might be expected. Often, it amplifies them.
When and by how much is a matter of hot debate among climate scientists. It is hard to pin any particular heatwave, drought or flood on the effects of man-made pollution. Freak events happen; the highest temperature ever recorded on Earth was 56.7°C in Death Valley, California, but that was on July 10th 1913, when concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere were much lower.
By using clever statistics to compare the climate’s actual behaviour with computer simulations of how it might have behaved in the absence of human activity, researchers can calculate how mankind has made a particular weather event more likely. The first such study, co-authored by Dr Stott in 2004, found that the likelihood of the 2003 European summer had doubled as a result of human activity. Since then similar “event attribution” research has burgeoned. A year ago Carbon Brief, a web portal, identified a total of 138 peer-reviewed papers in the field, covering 144 weather events. Of 48 heatwaves, 41 contained humankind’s imprint in the data.
More studies have appeared since then. World Weather Attribution, a website run by Dr van Oldenborgh and Friederike Otto of Oxford University, posts a new one practically every month. Besides scrutinising past weather, many of the studies look ahead—in particular at how the likelihood of future extreme events changes depending on how seriously countries take their commitment in Paris in 2015 to limit global warming to “well below” 2°C relative to pre-industrial levels (and better yet, to no more than 1.5°C).
The picture that emerges is bleak. One study, published in June by Andrew King of the University of Melbourne and his colleagues, found that the number of Europeans who can expect to witness a temperature above the current record, wherever they happen to live, would double from 45m today to 90m if the planet warmed by another 0.5°C or so on top of the 1°C since the 1880s. If, instead of 0.5°C, it warmed by 1°C, the figure would rise to 163m.
This looks even more alarming if you factor in humidity. Human beings can tolerate heat with sweat, which evaporates and cools the skin. That is why a dry 50°C can feel less stifling than a muggy 30°C. If the wet-bulb temperature (equivalent to that recorded by a thermometer wrapped in a moist towel) exceeds 35°C, even a fit, healthy youngster lounging naked in the shade next to a fan could die in six hours.
At present, wet-bulb temperatures seldom exceed 31°C. In 2016 Jeremy Pal of Loyola Marymount University and Elfatih Eltahir of the Massachusetts Institute for Technology found that if carbon emissions continue unabated, several cities in the Persian Gulf, including Abu Dhabi and Dubai, could exceed wet-bulb levels of 35°C by the end of the century. A follow-up study reckoned that, by 2100, parts of South Asia, which is much more populous than the sheikhdoms and a lot poorer, could suffer a wet-bulb level of 34.2°C every 25 years.
The effects could be devastating. The World Bank has warned that rising temperatures and changing monsoons could cost India 2.8% of GDP per person by 2050 and affect the living standards of 600m Indians in areas identified as hot spots. The global cost of productivity lost to heat has been estimated at $2trn by 2030.
The toll on human lives is hard to imagine. But at least people can learn from past mistakes. Thanks to better government responses, particularly in care for the elderly, in 2012 Europe survived a summer hotter still than 2003 with fewer casualties. As Indians get richer more will be able to afford air-conditioning; even those in shantytowns can paint their corrugated-iron roofs white to reflect sunlight. If only the world could take in a similar lesson about the importance of stopping climate change in the first place."

Saturday 21 July 2018

WHERE DO THE FLOODS COME FROM?

http://www.ziarpiatraneamt.ro/de-unde-vin-inundatiile


This amazing short video shows an experiment made in order to prove where the floods come from... Food for thoughts!!! 

It explains the importance of having trees that with their roots protect from landslides, slips and most important they help to purify water.


Please watch it and let me know what you think!!

Wednesday 4 July 2018

HOW MANY TREES DO WE STILL HAVE TO KILL?

... we need to change this trend NOW!!

Self explanatory image about the effect our society is having on the environment..




























Tuesday 19 June 2018

REGREENING THE PLANET
















Hello all,


please have a look at this documentary, it is amazing!!

Now I feel like buying a piece of land and working on it, I found this video very inspiring and motivating!!

It explains how China, Egypt, Spain and India have fight and are fighting the desert expansion and how it reflects on the environment and community economy, super interesting, I loved it!!

Let me know what you think!


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OC_Y1ZTZXQ4

Wednesday 6 June 2018

TOO HOT TO HANDLE - CLIMATE CHANGE IS MAKING THE ARAB WORLD MORE MISERABLE from The Economist

Hello All,

I am reporting an article I read in these days in 'The Economist' interesting but never the less alarming.It concerns me how the majority of people are still underestimating the problem of the global warming and not doing enough to divert this trend.
Full article can be found @: https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2018/06/02/climate-change-is-making-the-arab-world-more-miserable
TOO HOT TO HANDLECLIMATE CHANGE IS MAKING THE ARAB WORLD MORE MISERABLE

"SIX years ago Nabil Musa, a Kurdish environmentalist, returned from over a decade abroad to find Iraq transformed. Rivers in which he had swum year-round turned to dust in summer. Skies once crowded with storks and herons were empty. Drought had pushed farmers to abandon their crops, and dust storms, once rare, choked the air. Inspired to act, he joined a local conservationist group, Nature Iraq, to lobby for greener practices. But Kurdish officials pay little attention. “One of the last things we want to think about is climate change,” says Mr Musa.
Apathy towards climate change is common across the Middle East and north Africa, even as the problems associated with it get worse. Longer droughts, hotter heatwaves and more frequent dust storms will occur from Rabat to Tehran, according to Germany’s Max Planck Institute for Chemistry. Already-long dry seasons are growing longer and drier, withering crops. Heat spikes are a growing problem too, with countries regularly notching lethal summer temperatures. Stretch such trends out a few years and they seem frightening—a few decades and they seem apocalyptic.
The institute forecasts that summer temperatures in the Middle East and north Africa will rise over twice as fast as the global average. Extreme temperatures of 46°C (115°F) or more will be about five times more likely by 2050 than they were at the beginning of the century, when similar peaks were reached, on average, 16 days per year. By 2100 “wet-bulb temperatures”—a measure of humidity and heat—could rise so high in the Gulf as to make it all but uninhabitable, according to a study in Nature(though its most catastrophic predictions are based on the assumption that emissions are not abated). Last year Iran came close to breaking the highest reliably recorded temperature of 54°C, which Kuwait reached the year before.

Dry and discontented
Water presents another problem. The Middle East and north Africa have little of it to begin with, and rainfall is expected to decline because of climate change. In some areas, such as the Moroccan highlands, it could drop by up to 40%. (Climate change might bring extra rain to coastal countries, such as Yemen, but that will probably be offset by higher evaporation.) Farmers struggling to nourish thirsty crops are digging more wells, draining centuries-old aquifers. A study using NASA satellites found that the Tigris and Euphrates basins lost 144 cubic kilometres (about the volume of the Dead Sea) of fresh water from 2003 to 2010. Most of this reduction was caused by the pumping of groundwater to make up for reduced rainfall.
Climate change is making the region even more volatile politically. When eastern Syria was ravaged by drought from 2007 to 2010, 1.5m people fled to cities, where many struggled. In Iran, a cycle of extreme droughts since the 1990s caused thousands of frustrated farmers to abandon the countryside. Exactly how much these events fuelled the war that broke out in Syria in 2011 and recent unrest in Iran is a topic of considerable debate. They have certainly added to the grievances that many in both countries feel.
The mere prospect of shortages can lead to conflicts, as states race to secure water supplies at the expense of downstream neighbours. When Ethiopia started building an enormous dam on the Nile, potentially limiting the flow, Egypt, which relies on the river for nearly all of its water, threatened war. Turkish and Iranian dams along the Tigris, Euphrates and other rivers have raised similar ire in Iraq, which is beset by droughts.
Scientists have laid out steps that Arab countries could take to adapt to climate change. Agricultural production could be shifted to heat-resilient crops. Israel uses drip irrigation, which saves water and could be copied. Cities could be modified to reduce the “urban heat-island effect”, by which heat from buildings and cars makes cities warmer than nearby rural areas. Few of these efforts have been tried by Arab governments, which are often preoccupied with other problems. Mr Musa says the Kurdish officials he lobbies have been distracted by a war with Islamic State, a failed referendum on independence and, now, repairing relations with Iraq’s central government in Baghdad.
Politics often gets in the way of problem-solving. Countries are rarely able to agree on how to share rivers and aquifers. In Gaza, where the seepage of saltwater and sewage into an overused aquifer raises the risk of disease, a blockade by Israel and Egypt has made it harder to build and run desalination plants. In Lebanon there is little hope that the government, divided along sectarian lines, will do anything to forestall the decline in the water supply predicted by the environment ministry. Countries such as Iraq and Syria, where war has devastated infrastructure, will struggle to prepare for a hotter, drier future.
Some countries are, at least, trying to curb emissions. Morocco is building a colossal solar-power plant in the desert, as is Dubai, part of United Arab Emirates (UAE). Saudi Arabia is not going to stop exporting oil, but it plans to build a solar plant that will be about 200 times the size of the biggest such facility operating today. Like other sun-drenched countries in the region, it sees solar power as a cost-effective way to increase the electricity supply and cut energy subsidies. “When I first started, people looked at environmentalists as tree-huggers,” says Safa al-Jayoussi of IndyACT, a conservationist group in Beirut. “But now I think the most important argument is the economic one.”
States in the Middle East and north Africa can do little on their own to mitigate climate change. Inevitably, though, they will need to adapt. So far depressingly little has been done. “Sometimes I feel like I’m on a treadmill,” says Mr Musa."

Monday 28 May 2018

GREAT PLASTIC PICK UP BY DAILY MAIL

Hello to Everyone,

I just want to share some of the pictures about the Plastic Pick Up event I took part recently. To honor the Daily Mail occurrence, Saturday 12th of May I went along the bank of the river Thames in the Putney borough to collect the rubbish the high tide brings off shore.

I was sadly impressed with the amount of rubbish I was able to pick up in less than 30 minutes in such a short stretch of road, and it made me wonder how much more is still floating in the waters.

I am glad I took part in this manifestation and it made me realize how much it needs to be done in order to have a clean environment around us. I have a new aim at the present: let's clean our planet!!


Plastic in the oceans is an issue NOW and & have to act!!!