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SustainAbility Council member Gary Kendall shares this report following a recent visit to China – in particular a portion of his journey featuring a cruise down the Yangtze River and through the locks at the infamous Three Gorges Dam.
“That’s my new house” – my Chinese tour guide gestured toward a row of featureless apartment blocks beneath our vantage point overlooking the river – “and that’s where I used to live.” She showed me a photograph of a modest two-storey structure within the walls of the ancient city of Fengjie. It presumably remains intact, albeit more than 150 metres underwater.
This stretch of the Yangtze – roughly 660km from Chongqing to Sandouping – is much less a river than a lake these days…
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Another year, another COP, another step closer to the brink. It must seem to the casual observer that the UN climate negotiations are an exercise designed explicitly to create gridlock and failure. Judging by many of the blogs, comments and tweets I’ve been reading since bleary-eyed delegates stumbled out of the Durban ICC on Sunday, the most recent episode has provoked some strong but mixed reactions: politicians claiming a triumph of multilateralism, NGOs decrying the lack of progress on issues of substance. Both views hold some merit. As someone who was present in Durban for the regulation fortnight – but missed the 36 hours of injury-time – I’d like to weigh in with my personal reflections.
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As unrest in North Africa and the Middle East enters a fifth month since the first sparks of the Tunisian Revolution last December, oil prices are starting to dominate the political discourse. In the UK, Energy Secretary Chris Huhne warned of a 1970s-style oil shock that could cost the UK economy £45 billion over two years. Closer to home, last week’s Financial Mail cover story on oil – the three letters that threaten economic growth – argued that a sustained high oil price threatens to completely stall the global recovery.
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Why history may record Monday 29th November 2010 as a date of uncommon significance.
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Why has the projection of a world of 9 billion people by 2050 become such a resilient piece of conventional wisdom?
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They embraced the challenge to go to the moon even though it would be hard. Now let us embrace the climate challenge.
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Gary Kendall on the hangover from COP 15, and the prognosis for COP 16 later this year.
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Reflections on the London tube strike.
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Why adaptation - not only to climate change and other challenges, but also to their purported solutions - is essential.
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At the time of writing it appears BP's desperate attempts to contain the Deepwater Horizon spill are drawing to a close.
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On July 29th I attended another "Global Summit on Sustainability" this time hosted by WCGC & the Indian IOD.
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It's remarkable how often we hear business leaders voicing ideological opposition to regulation...
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Like many colleagues in the sustainability field, I continue to struggle with the notion of economic growth...
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Last Tuesday I met with a group of MEPs from The Greens / European Free Alliance at the European Parliament in Brussels.
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Reflecting on yesterday's CSV Forum 2010 in London, I confess that my expectations going into the event were low.
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As BP struggles to contain the potentially devastating oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, familiar questions are being ask
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Gary Kendall reflects on what COP 15 did - and didn't - deliver.
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Gary Kendall reflects on the outcome of COP 15, and finally rediscovers daylight.
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Gary Kendall takes a first look at the Copenhagen Accord.
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Summary of Obama's press conference at COP 15.