Thursday, October 28, 2010

Electric cars expected to struggle for next decade | Grist
Yes, electric cars have come back from the dead. But it looks like their pulse will be pretty weak for awhile. A long while.
EU Referendum: Stuffed warmists
The point, of course, is that temperature is only a proxy for heat if you are measuring a known, stable quantity. And since air only holds a fraction of the heat held by the oceans – and we have no reliable way of determining the average temperature of the global water mass, we have no way of calculating the total heat - much less the degree to which it has changed.
Watch the Pea « Climate Audit
Jones’ carefully crafted statement says only that he hadn’t personally deleted the Wahl-Briffa emails. It is silent on whether Briffa and/or Wahl acted on Jones’ request to delete the email record of their surreptitious IPCC correspondence.
Is Green Socialism EPA's Real Goal? - Investors.com
Government: While it destroys jobs with its regulations, the EPA has an opening for an "environmental protection specialist" whose job it is to help the agency meet its "environmental justice goals." Meet its what?

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Electric cars have great potential. Nobody has claimed they will replace the combustion engine, in use for 100 years, "overnight". This smells of Big Oil propaganda. Threy're scared to death about electric cars making their products less and less valuable. That's why they fight against coal and nuclear power and support so called "renewable" energy like wind and solar. Because wind and solar are not strong enough to power our homes, let alone electric cars. The "solution" then is to use natural gas in power plants, putting coal miners out of work, raising prices, and enriching the oil&gas industry.