His book and movie tankedFormer Vice President Al Gore is preparing to host another 24 - hour - long broadcast to to sound the alarm on manmade global warming, capping off a disappointing year for the world's most famous climate activist.Gore's environmental group will put on «24 Hours of Reality» broadcast in early December, which will feature celebrity guest appearances, including actress Helen Hunt, musical performances and segments on what different parts of the world are
doing about global warming.
What are such island nations actually
doing about global warming?
Democratic and Republican mayors in the Sunshine State realize something must be
done about global warming
«If we can partition how much is from cows, natural gas, and other sources, we can more reliably strategize what to
do about global warming.»
So what will Obama
do about global warming?
The Hot Topic: What We Can
Do About Global Warming By Gabrielle Walker and Sir David King (Harcourt) In The Hot Topic, former science advisor to the British government Sir David King teams up with veteran science writer Gabrielle Walker to offer perhaps the most thoughtful and scientifically rigorous work to date on how we got the Earth into this fix, and how we can help get it out.
Frankly, my guess is that all Dan Wiener's hype about superior performance has much more to
do about global diversification and little to do about superior performance or the generation of excess returns or «alpha.»
Opinion polls for the past decade have consistently shown that the public would like to see something
done about the global warming problem, along with many other environmental issues.
Even if Americans were in agreement that something should be
done about global warming, and they clearly aren't (yet), our political system would choke up like an overflowing septic tank.
«The cynical but probably realistic conclusion is that nothing very meaningful will be
done about global warming until the politicians are being hammered over the head with the consequences.»
Denial keeps us from moving from basic questions about whether it is warming or not to more important questions about what, if anything, we should
do about global warming.
Deciding what, if anything, to
do about global warming is a political problem, but the politicians should keep the science in mind.
That would give President Barack Obama some progress on climate to show off in Copenhagen, Denmark, where world leaders will discuss what to
do about global warming, but leave a final push in the Senate for early 2010.
Easily the proudest moment of that campaign and my entire year with Green Corps was the Saturday before the New Hampshire primary when John McCain, in a school gymnasium, stood up and said, «I've heard from young people all across this state and around the country, for the last couple of months about «What are you gonna do about climate change, what are you gonna
do about global warming?»
There only purpose in requesting this data is to find something wrong with it and then demand that nothing be
done about global warming.
Even just acknowledging more openly the incredible magnitude of the deep structural uncertainties that are involved in climate - change analysis — and explaining better to policymakers that the artificial crispness conveyed by conventional IAM - based CBAs [Integrated Assessment Model — Cost Benefit Analyses] here is especially and unusually misleading compared with more ordinary non-climate-change CBA situations — might go a long way toward elevating the level of public discourse concerning what to
do about global warming.
We were asked: «What can
we do about global warming?»
Just as Thabo Mbeki, President of South Africa, has provided legitimacy to the movement questioning the connection between AIDS and the HIV - virus, so Lomborg has provided legitimacy to the «there is no global warming / there's nothing we should
do about global warming» movement.
There is something you can
do about global warming.
Not exact matches
And when I say procto - parents, I mean parents who are totally into minding their kids» and everyone else's business, but don't know the first thing
about effective education, or how to build the kind of self - sufficient, self - starting students that we actually
do need to compete in the
global marketplace.
Carney, who now leads the Bank of England, has inserted himself into the
global debate over what to
do about climate change.
Cynthia Augustine, who serves as the
global chief talent officer for the ad agency Foote, Cone & Belding, explains to CNBC Make It that asking
about a project that didn't particularly go your way gives a broader sense of who the candidate is in addition to what's on paper.
It's actually quite a relief to hear from someone with years of experience who has built a substantial, multi-decade career in a major industry at a
global corporation (BP / Amoco) instead of a wet - behind - the - ears «expert» who's had
about 15 minutes of startup success and no clue
about how he or she got there, or what to
do next.
And as
global awareness
about the horrific practices surrounding the mining of so - called «blood diamonds» in Africa intensified, Aber's Canadian provenance didn't hurt its prospects.
We know they are the
global leader in e-commerce, but that doesn't stop them from socializing their online ordering process to let customers tell their networks
about their purchases.
Even if you don't care
about global warming or sea levels, power and unproductive employees cost money.
When we had Cisco
doing their innovation centres here, one of five in the world, recently we had a couple of other
global companies that have come here, they talk
about that as being an important consideration.
Western - based
global brands such as Starbucks and Unilever have
done a remarkably good job at telling their social stories — think
about 100,000 Opportunities and the Dove Self - Esteem Project.
These bitter realities don't show up in the footnotes of those glowing, sanitized profit statements or in the rosy accounts spewed by apparatchik economists
about the «benefits of
global capital flows.»
«We wanted to make sure that our own country was part of the conversation
about global health issues in two ways — one, making sure that we're not thinking of it as issues that affect other people that don't have anything to
do with us, but also acknowledging that we can learn so much from what has gone well or new models that are effective in other countries,» Bush tells Business Insider.
One person driving less, eating less factory - farmed meat, flying less, polluting less, using less air conditioning — you know things you could
do — may affect little on a
global CO2 scale, but maybe today, if everyone who reads this article who cares
about Thoreau's legacy, who believes in self - determination, who calls him - or herself a leader, or just wants to be one, acts by his or her values...
Elon Musk, founder and CEO, SpaceX and Tesla — Referencing Musk's mission to build conditions for a viable colony on Mars, Yuri Milner, founder of DST
Global, says Musk «is one of the few people not only thinking
about the survival of our civilization but also
doing something
about it.»
So, I had a brilliant idea to get certified to be a nail tech,» she said in a blog post for
Global Grind, adding «Don't be surprised if you hear
about a part time job I've picked up at a local nail salon.»
An eight - episode series
about the world of shipping containers and
global trade may seem like a niche subject, but it doesn't take long for host Alexis Madrigal to convince listeners why the development of this worldwide network has shaped every aspect of life on Earth.
Canadian CEOs and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty say the same thing
about the IMF's proposed
global bank tax: Canada doesn't need it.
Improving the
global water supply isn't just
about doing good — it's one of the biggest market opportunities going.
But the economically disenfranchised blue - collar voters who put him in office don't care
about the tech industry; they want to roll back the clock to a time before the internet, before automation in factories, before the flow of
global goods, services, and capital made Silicon Valley wildly rich.
The data, however, doesn't seem to be quelling concerns — not least from the Chinese regulators themselves —
about a major credit event spreading to
global markets.
We take our responsibility seriously, and today I want to talk
about how we plan to
do our part to build this
global community.
I don't worry
about global warming or
global pandemics or saving whales.
Irrespective of whether we
did everything that is being said
about us in London today (and to be clear, I don't think we
did), it really matters what people think of us, especially in a
global business like ours, where actions in one part of the world can have serious consequences in another.
Enter the
DO School, a
global institution that, for select programs, borrows students passionate
about social change from accredited colleges and offers them experiential learning through
doing, challenging them to solve real - world, pressing problems in sustainable ways.
Going along with anti-establishment and populist sentiments, Eurasia Group says politicians could be forced by voters «to shift toward a more zero - sum approach to
global economic competition and to look as if they're
doing something
about lost jobs.»
Fortune and Time gathered 100
global chief executives yesterday in lower Manhattan for a day of powerful conversations
about how the private sector can
do well by
doing good — which, as Fortune subscribers know, is the theme of our annual Change the World issue.
«When we think
about why companies go public, they
do it for liquidity, to raise their profile, for capital,» John Tuttle, head of
global listings at NYSE, told Business Insider.
The company doesn't provide country - specific information
about its audience but it has an estimated
global audience of 159 million paying monthly active users and 92 million free monthly active users.
He also informs that developing the MLP is
done through structured, hands - on learning focussed on aspects such as reducing customer and market risk while launching the product, cross - border /
Global networking and coaching with Silicon Valley mentors and coaches, and systematic learning
about entrepreneurship and innovation while the idea is being nurtured and developed.
Guive Balooch,
global vice president of L'Oreal's Technology Incubator, tells Fortune that the device can be a helpful tool because many consumers today don't have reliable information
about their UV exposure.
Employees at Bain & Company, a
global management consulting firm headquartered in Boston, rave
about its «incredible culture» and its «incredible people [who display] a mix of intelligence but also humility that you don't find at other top consulting firms.»
«You hear
about all the bad things we're
doing to the planet, to the ocean: the pollution, overfishing,
global climate change,» Lowe says.