LONDON, 16 January, 2015 — Humans are now
the chief drivers of change in the planet's physical, chemical, biological and economic systems according to new research in a series of journals.
Not exact matches
When Jack Roushannounced in April that he was overhauling two
of his race teams,
changing thecrew
chiefs of Carl Edwards and Jamie McMurray, neither
driver was happy withthe news.
After a slightly farcical Monza weekend in which 150 places worth
of grid penalties were split among nine
drivers, F1
chiefs said that the whole system
of punishment for penalising component
changes needed overhauling.
It seems like every single day there's been some sort
of breaking news regarding
driver movement, crew
chief changes or sponsorship.
For Nissan, that string
of digits — seven minutes, eight seconds, and
change — was the mantra
of the GT - R Nismo, chanted at the recent Tokyo motor show reveal by everyone from Nissan
chief Carlos Ghosn to test
driver Michael Krumm.
The
change is being led from the top by Akio Toyoda, who in taking on the roles
of Lexus»
Chief Branding Officer and master
driver, has given the business more freedom, autonomy, and the confidence to be daring.
According to Shelby American's
chief test
driver Vince LaViolette, all these
changes bring significant handling improvements, allowing for more grip for later braking, earlier acceleration out
of corners, and more feedback to the
driver.
The U.S. Supreme Court fell for junk science when it approved the EPA's «finding» that carbon dioxide is the
chief driver of global climate
change, notes CFACT advisor Dennis T. Avery.