Climate Change: Lessons from Brazil's Forest Policy
Carlos Klink, National Secretary for Climate Change of the Brazilian Ministry of Environment, discusses the implications of Brazil’s Forest Policy for the ...
Brazil's indigenous people rally at UN climate conference
Members of Brazil's Association of Indigenous Peoples demonstrate in Lima to ask for more protection of their land rights. The UN Climate Conference was ...
Brazil builds giant Amazon observation tower to monitor climate change
Brazil is building a giant observation at a site about 150 km northeast of Manaus, the capital of the state of Amazonas. The Amazon Tall Tower Observatory is a ...
A video made for 2216: The Economics of Global Warming For the group Project at the end of the semester. Voiced by Ali Callidine Edited by Hadrian Laing ...
Dear. InfiniteMomentStudio
My name is Bitsaem Han from South Korea and I am an assistant director of
Our Sole Earth, documentary TV program of EBS. EBS is Educational
Broadcasting System in Korea. We are the public broadcasting system like
GLOBO in BRAZIL.
Our team is a sole weekly environmental documentary in the country.
I am writing this mail to ask some favor to you . Before asking favors, Let
me introduce our project.
As a documentary program, we are in process a subject, We are going to
introduce the Brazilian ecosystems. We will show Pantanal wetlands and
Lencois deserts, and a mysterious and rare animals in Brazil. so we want
to introduce your footage.
While we find various examples, we found your footage through youtube
The wedding videos "Brazil and Climate change (educational video) " are
very great and impressed us.
We believe if we show your footage, Our viewers to understand the
environment in Brazil will be a big help.
Therefore, I ask your approve to using footage "Brazil and Climate change
(educational video) " in our program.
If you give your permission, we will reveal the source of your footage
clearly.
but we don't have enough budget.
We hope you allows to use it.
Please feel free to contact if you have any questions.
Sincerely,
Bitsaem Han.
*____________________________________________________________________________*
[email protected]
//home.ebs.co.kr/hana/main
Brazilian Indigenous Leader: Carbon Trading Scheme "REDD" is a False Solution to Climate Change
//democracynow.org - The controversial carbon trading scheme known as REDD, or Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation, has ...
When will socialists learn that force will never result in the change they
want. If they rejected the use of force, by anyone, especially governments,
than real change will happen all on it's own. Average everyday people are
doing much more than any government could ever do to reduce their
dependency on oil. Socialists don't understand that it is force that is the
problem. We wouldn't even be as dependent on oil, if our governments didn't
control how cars are built, and didn't regulate the automotive industry
like it does. Again, force creates the problems.
+shurednichso And what will happen if you do not reject force? Whether statists died, is irrelevant. Notice also, that you remember those that are killed, just as you are programmed to. You ignore that there are literally millions of people that reject force and are not killed.If you want to say that I am idealistic, then what would you call those that cling to the notion that violence can protect them. You can call anyone an ideologue, but what good is that? People are not wrong because they believe in things. They are wrong because of what they believe in. You must evaluate the substance, not the fact that they believe.
You are putting your ideology in front of historical reality. Martin Luthor King Jr. was against violence - he was shot.Ghandi was shit.And most importantly the non-violent anarchists in Spain, which owned the places they worked in were brutally crushed.
How soccer stadiums help to fight climate change in Brazil
Brazil is a solar energy pioneer in Latin America. The country's biggest photovoltaic facility is a unique one: it generates 600 MWh, but unlike other solar plants, ...
"80% of renewable sources in their energies, including hidro" Oh you mean
the dams and the new dam Belo Monte that is moving the indigenous people
away and causing social unrest to their people. This is what Brasil should
have been doing in the first place, more solar and windmills. There was no
need for that, the people won't forget that fast !