|
|||||
|
Create a free Reader Account
to post comments. Login
Get free daily SCIY Notable SCIY Topics
Search
Recent Visitors
Cristian - Aug 20, 10:19AM
ned - Aug 20, 08:22AM
Vladimir - Aug 20, 03:37AM
Vikas - Aug 20, 01:22AM
RY Deshpande - Aug 19, 09:06PM
Rich - Aug 19, 05:02PM
ronjon - Aug 19, 11:41AM
rakesh - Aug 15, 11:35PM
Debashish - Aug 15, 07:38PM
Amrit - Aug 12, 07:13AM
The Best of SCIY
Category Folders (below) Click folder names for contained articles, Click 'Main Page' to return. Month Archive
|
Wednesday, November 14
by
RY Deshpande
on November 14, 2007 08:34PM (PST)
Here are two stories—one of construction and the other destruction. While in China a Hindu temple is being built, the historic 40-metre tall Bamiyan style Buddha in Pakistan’s Swat valley is in the process of being reduced to rubble. more »
Sunday, November 11
by
ronjon
on November 11, 2007 11:11PM (PST)
China will become the world’s biggest carbon polluter this year, overtaking the United States, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said in a bleak forecast of soaring global demand for fossil fuels. The rapid growth of the Chinese and Indian economies will raise global energy demand by 50 per cent by 2030, the agency said in its annual World Energy Outlook. India and China alone will account for almost half of the increase.
The agency pointed a finger at soaring coal demand, which threatens to upset carbon reduction targets, as it painted an alarming picture of a future of energy insecurity, soaring oil prices and a massive increase in carbon emissions. The dash towards prosperity in Asia will be fuelled by hydrocarbons - and mainly by increased burning of coal – with an inexorable rise in carbon emissions, hastening climate change. Accelerating demand for oil, which will reach 116 million barrels per day (bpd) by 2030, up 32 per cent, will require huge investments to keep pace, the IEA said, and the sums are increasing. Inflation has taken its toll, and the agency reckons that $5.4 trillion (£2.6 trillion) must be spent to raise capacity, up a quarter from the estimate last year. It gives warning that plans to raise output from new projects may not compensate for the decline in existing fields. “A supply-side crunch in the period to 2014, involving an abrupt escalation in oil prices, cannot be ruled out,” the IEA said in its report. ... more » |
SCIY Index & Page Views
View SCIY Slide Shows
Recent Articles
August 20 Quote of the Day
ronjon
August 19 Quote of the Day
ronjon
August 18 Quote of the Day
ronjon
August 17 Quote of the Day
ronjon
August 16 Quote of the Day
ronjon
A Declaration by the Mother, dated 25 April 1954
RY Deshpande
August 15 Quote of the Day
ronjon
15 August 2008
RY Deshpande
A Marathon Lexicography Work—by S. Rajendran
RY Deshpande
August 14 Quote of the Day
ronjon
August 13 Quote of the Day
ronjon
Recent Comments
Full text of Comments
Recent Book Reviews
Recommended Links
|
|||
|
|||||