Portfolio Adviser :: Nikko rolls-out World Bank-backed green fund
Have you ever noticed how believers also love to use the word "seized" to describe the activities of climate realists? It sounds them sound so dishonest!
Tough winter killing off mule deer | greatfallstribune.com | Great Falls Tribune
Japan-based Nikko Asset Management is to roll out its World Bank Green Fund for European investors as a Luxembourg-domiciled Ucits III fund.Have you ever noticed how believers love to use the word "tackle" to describe their own activities? It makes them sound so heroic!
Managed by Stuart Kinnersley, the fund can invest up to 100% of its portfolio in green bonds issued by the World Bank, with all proceeds used to support projects that are designed to tackle the causes and consequences of climate change in the developing world.
Have you ever noticed how believers also love to use the word "seized" to describe the activities of climate realists? It sounds them sound so dishonest!
Tough winter killing off mule deer | greatfallstribune.com | Great Falls Tribune
The increasingly tough, lingering winter in northcentral Montana is killing mule deer when mule deer numbers generally are down across the region.Let's say that during a heat wave, deer were dying in yards in Montana. Wouldn't this be highly publicized, and wouldn't this be sold as part of an overwhelming body of evidence that carbon dioxide is dangerous?
The mule deer winterkill appears to be localized: landowners north of Galata, which is east of Shelby on the Hi-Line, report deer dying in their feed lots; homeowners in Lewistown say deer are dying in their yards in town.
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"This is a tough winter," said Stivers. "Last winter was tough in this part of the world and this is a tough winter. I am picking up fawns that are starving to death in town. Deer have walked up on sunny side and don't look too bad and they lie down and go to sleep and die.
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Wildlife Biologist Adam Grove of White Sulphur Springs said he has received no reports of unusual winter mortality on the south side of the Little Belts, but he pointed out that peak mortality generally occurs mid March through sometime in May.
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