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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category coal.
  • Report: China Could Generate 80 Percent of Its Energy From Renewables By 2050 For Less Than Cost of Coal

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  March 26, 2014  //  By Xiupei Liang
    coal-loading2

    The idea that China, the world’s largest producer of greenhouse gas emissions, could generate a significant portion of its energy from renewable sources might seem like a distant dream, but according to a new report, it’s not so far off. [Video Below]

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  • Big Changes Need Big Stories: The Year Ahead in Environment and Energy Reporting

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    From the Wilson Center  //  On the Beat  //  March 17, 2014  //  By Donald Borenstein
    Rhine_coal_mine3

    While climate change has enjoyed a recent spike in news coverage, journalists face a constant challenge to bring sustained attention to other environmental stories, including resource scarcity, the changing oceans, and demographic change. [Video Below]

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  • Nat Geo’s Dennis Dimick on the Food-Water-Energy Nexus, Coal, and the Year Ahead

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    Friday Podcasts  //  February 21, 2014  //  By Paris Achenbach
    dennis-dimick

    How clean can coal be? What is the future of food security in water-deprived regions, and how will that affect national security? Dennis Dimick, National Geographic Magazine’s executive editor for the environment, discusses some of the most pressing global environmental problems in this week’s podcast.

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  • Torrent of Water and Questions Pour From India’s Himalayas

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    Choke Point  //  December 13, 2013  //  By Keith Schneider
    himalayan-peak-1-2

    We made the crossing at night from Chamoli, reaching Okund, a Himalayan foothill town after dark. The innkeeper, anxious for guests in a travel economy that came to a standstill in mid-June, cooked dal and nan bread for dinner and then showed us to a room that was unlit and unheated.

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  • Photo Essay: Wuhai City Coal Complex Shows Costs of China’s Energy Demands

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    China Environment Forum  //  August 14, 2013  //  By Susan Chan Shifflett
    Wuhai City Moonscape

    The black, blasted landscape of Wuhai City sometimes looks more like the moon than Inner Mongolia. But this scene is becoming all too common across much of Northern China. China’s massive coal industry is not only polluting the air and water, but also fundamentally altering the surrounding landscape and communities.

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  • The Leopard in the Well: Wilson Center and Circle of Blue Launch ‘Choke Point: India’

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    Choke Point  //  June 13, 2013  //  By Keith Schneider
    Irrigation pump in Punjab

    The original version of this article, by Keith Schneider, appeared on Circle of Blue. Choke Point: India is a research and reporting initiative produced in partnership between Circle of Blue and the Wilson Center’s China Environment Forum and Asia Program.

    Perhaps because India is so big, so bewildering and chaotic, and so determined to update its elusive rural identity with sleek urban flare, Indians and the national press are fascinated by how the nation’s wild animals are faring amid the dizzying change. In many cases, not well.

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  • Despite “Greener Economy,” Extractive Industries’ Effects on Global Development, Stability Bigger Than Ever

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    June 10, 2013  //  By Lauren Herzer Risi & Schuyler Null

    Despite the appearance of a new, “greener” economy, extractive industries – mining, oil, and natural gas – are now responsible for “moving more earth each year, just for mining and quarrying, than the global hydrological cycle,” writes the Transatlantic Academy’s Stacy VanDeveer in a recent paper, Still Digging: Extractive Industries, Resource Curses, and Transnational Governance in the Anthropocene. The costs of this activity are high and extend well beyond the wallet, he explains.

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  • Mapping China’s Massive West-East Electricity Transfer Project [Infographic]

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    China Environment Forum  //  February 20, 2013  //  By David Tyler Gibson

    The Wilson Center’s China Environment Forum is proud to announce that we are launching our first interactive infographic: a map of China’s West-East Electricity Transfer Project. The map underscores China’s energy and water imbalances and the looming choke point China faces in terms of water, food, and energy security. The map also illustrates how consumer goods made in China’s factories along its eastern coast are powered by coal and hydropower in the country’s western provinces.

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