Australia's shame; it's not our problem the only one we have is that they want asylum here. These people are so poor they can't make it to the region or selling body parts to try raise the funds. Whatever Dutton and Bolt don't lose sleep over it as long as it stays in the Middle East.
Russian Navy ships arrive in the Philippines as Duturte moves to bolster Moscow ties – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
A Russian anti-submarine ship and sea tanker arrive in the Philippines for a goodwill visit amid President Duterte’s moves to bolster ties with Moscow.
Yes Andrew cheered when Tony Abbott was made Pivot of the Pacific and shirt fronted Putin we couldn't here the end of it. He went to the Ukraine and forgot the Pacific he wanted to be an honorary member of NATO instead. What would Tony advise now with Trump cosying up to Putin and Russia showing off it's Pacific Fleet.
Why does Andrew Bolt support Israel? Bolt wants a war on Africans
Netanyahu openly boasts of Israel's war on Africans
3 January 2017
" In the past three years, Netanyahu’s government has spent $260 million to round up African refugees and bring them to desert detention centers (prisons). Israel has the gall to categorize this massive expenditure as “foreign aid.”"
" For the eight years that the United States was led by a president of African descent, Netanyahu felt no need to rein in Israel’s war on Africans. Now that Donald Trump, the darling of white supremacists, has been elected to the Oval Office, we can only expect Netanyahu to ramp it up into an even higher gear."
All these announcements were once announced in Hebrew and hidden now Netanyahu is making his war known in English
Bolt wants welfare for Indigenous Australians in remote areas cut and children removed. He's an apologist for Dondale and Indigenous youth have been treated too kindly.
Babies die as Israel blocks ambulances in Hebron
3 January 2017
"Settlements do not just consist of creating housing for one ethno-religious group, but also entail a constellation of policies that ghettoize and force Palestinians out of their homes and off their land.
Since 2014, Badil, a group campaigning for the rights of Palestinian refugees, has published a series of studies on forced population transfer in Palestine.
Badil’s latest publication focuses on Hebron in the southern West Bank."
"Settlements do not just consist of creating housing for one ethno-religious group, but also entail a constellation of policies that ghettoize and force Palestinians out of their homes and off their land.
Since 2014, Badil, a group campaigning for the rights of Palestinian refugees, has published a series of studies on forced population transfer in Palestine.
Badil’s latest publication focuses on Hebron in the southern West Bank."
A Coal Plant In India Has Found A Way To Turn Almost All Its CO2 Emissions Into Baking Powder.
An added cost to clean coal. India has also built the world's largest Solar Energy Plant realizing it's an investment in the future of cheaper energy for 1 Bill + people.
Why is India more inventive and Australia so regressive one asks? Maybe because Indians are encouraged to ask questions something Bolt finds dangerous when it comes to education. The worlds Technological and Health centers have high Indian populations not Australian ones.
A company in India has said it has been turning
captured carbon dioxide from a coal-powered boiler into valuable
chemicals such as baking powder, in what is thought to be a world first.
The process is taking place at a chemical plant in the city of Tuticorin. With the help of an Indian firm, Carbon Clean Solutions, they say they can save 60,000 tonnes (66,000 tons) of CO2 emissions a year.
"I am a businessman. I never thought about saving the planet,” Ramachadran Gopalan, who owns the plant, Tuticorin Alkali Chemicals, told BBC Radio 4. “I needed a reliable stream of CO2, and this was the best way of getting it.”
Carbon Clean is run by two young Indian chemists, with their technique using salt to bond with CO2 molecules in the boiler chimney from flue gases. This process of carbon capture differs from others in that it uses a new chemical to strip CO2, which is apparently more efficient than current chemicals. More than 90 percent of the CO2 is said to be captured.
The soda ash produced has a range of uses, which include glass manufacture, sweeteners, detergents, and paper products, according to the Guardian. The plant supposedly has almost zero emissions now since utilizing the technique.
Last year, a plant in Iceland made a breakthrough when it turned carbon dioxide into stone. But having a more useful by-product, like soda ash, could be more appealing to businesses. On their website, Carbon Clean estimates that carbon capture could reduce about 20 percent of the total global greenhouse emissions contributing to climate change within the next four decades.
“Major carbon dioxide emitters like power plants and manufacturing facilities, in future may be asked to install carbon capture technologies or pay carbon tax,” they note. “Carbon Clean Solutions is innovating and working with customers to develop technologies that will cost effectively reduce the CO2 emissions from such large point sources.”
The process is taking place at a chemical plant in the city of Tuticorin. With the help of an Indian firm, Carbon Clean Solutions, they say they can save 60,000 tonnes (66,000 tons) of CO2 emissions a year.
"I am a businessman. I never thought about saving the planet,” Ramachadran Gopalan, who owns the plant, Tuticorin Alkali Chemicals, told BBC Radio 4. “I needed a reliable stream of CO2, and this was the best way of getting it.”
Carbon Clean is run by two young Indian chemists, with their technique using salt to bond with CO2 molecules in the boiler chimney from flue gases. This process of carbon capture differs from others in that it uses a new chemical to strip CO2, which is apparently more efficient than current chemicals. More than 90 percent of the CO2 is said to be captured.
The soda ash produced has a range of uses, which include glass manufacture, sweeteners, detergents, and paper products, according to the Guardian. The plant supposedly has almost zero emissions now since utilizing the technique.
Last year, a plant in Iceland made a breakthrough when it turned carbon dioxide into stone. But having a more useful by-product, like soda ash, could be more appealing to businesses. On their website, Carbon Clean estimates that carbon capture could reduce about 20 percent of the total global greenhouse emissions contributing to climate change within the next four decades.
“Major carbon dioxide emitters like power plants and manufacturing facilities, in future may be asked to install carbon capture technologies or pay carbon tax,” they note. “Carbon Clean Solutions is innovating and working with customers to develop technologies that will cost effectively reduce the CO2 emissions from such large point sources.”
No comments:
Post a Comment