SolveClimate: Universities Start Tailoring Degrees to [Climate Fraud]
Hotter temperatures leading to heat-related illnesses and deaths, and warmer and wetter conditions favorable to mosquitoes, ticks and other disease vectors will increase the need for public health and emergency medical care professionals, as well as medical researchers to develop vaccines and to forecast how diseases will spread.Paid, full time internship in climate change group :: Alliance for Green Heat
Demand will also grow for air conditioning and refrigeration, which currently use some of the most damaging greenhouse gases available – hydrofluorocarbons that have thousands of times the global warming potential of carbon dioxide.
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More extreme weather events, such as hurricanes, tornadoes and drought, will require more people trained in durable building design, disaster relief, fire fighting, and insurance products and services.
Full Time, Paid Internship in Climate Change OrganizationSmoke From Wood Burning Stoves Pose Major Climate and Health Problems | ForceChange
The Alliance for Green Heat, a non-profit organization promoting wood heat as a carbon neutral renewable fuel, has an exciting opportunity for a full-time internship for someone interested in climate change and government policy.
Another potent climate change driver has been on the radar of many scientists lately. The problem is soot emissions from wood fired stoves used extensively throughout the developing world. The soot emissions are believed to be so potent that they are considered by some to be the second biggest driver of climate change after CO2.Salami tactics to buy support for US cap™: John Kemp
But as voter awareness of how cap-and-trade will work and will increase energy prices has grown, popular support has eroded. According ecoAmerica President Robert Perkowitz, interviewed in the WSJ, less than half the respondents in a voter survey said they would support a cap-and-trade policy. So the administration is keen to rebrand the process.Global warming: OSU speaks - Campus
Of several issues being discussed in Washington, students ranked the environment second-to-last in importance. But when considering what the government should do about global climate change, students prioritized the creation of "green" jobs and saving endangered plants and animals just below developing alternative energy, reducing reliance on foreign oil and losing jobs and trade to other countries.
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