Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Saturday said the world expected India to play a more important role in the global polity and economy as the country’s rise as an emerging nation was seen as a positive factor in international relations. “The world expects India to play a more important role in the management of global polity [...]
Posts Tagged ‘climate change conference’
India’s rise welcomed as positive factor: PM
Climate change conference opens
Parliament President Slavica Äukić-Dejanović late on Monday officially opened a two-day climate change conference. The gathering was dubbed “Learning and teaching climate changesand the United Nations systemâ€.
Google Wave Used for Disparate Collaboration Cases
More than one million people are actively using Google Wave, the search engine’s real-time collaboration platform, to work together on various projects. Collaborative debate Website Debatewise.org used Wave recently to let 1,000 people from more than 130 countries debate issues arising from the Copenhagen climate change conference. Caroline Dahllöf and Carolyn Uy, founders of application development outfit Lyn And Line, use Google Wave to create educational story applications. Forrester Research analyst Ted Schadler said Forrester is working on a session on Wave as an example of next-generation collaboration tools for distributed teams for its next IT Forum.
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More than one million people are actively using Google
Wave, the search engine’s real-time collaboration platform, to work together on
various projects.
Google periodically publishes use cases for Wave. While
these prove quite different in nature, they’re all linked by a common th…
Thom Yorke Reports From Copenhagen Climate Conference
Thom Yorke Reports From Copenhagen Climate Change Conference
Radiohead‘s Thom Yorke acquired a press pass for the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen and has been reporting from the event via the band’s Dead Air Space. He’s made several entries over the past few days, check ‘em out.
Thom Yorke and environmentalist Tony Juniper at the United Nations Climate Change ConferenceIn Copenhagen – Photo from Dead Air Space |
Tadić attends climate change conference
President Boris Tadić is in Copenhagen this Friday heading a state delegation at the final part of the 2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference. The aim of the conference is to reach a new global agreement for fighting climate change which would replace the current Kyoto Protocol that expires in 2012.
“Decision on candidacy status application on Saturday”
The government will decide on Saturday when Serbia’s EU candidacy application will be submitted, President Boris Tadić said. Tadić, who is leading the state delegation at the final part of the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, stated that he would attend the government meeting on Saturday and submit his report about the talks he had recently with officials of the EU member-states.
Obama, Medvedev to discuss arms deal
A senior U.S. official says President Barack Obama and Russian President Dmitri Medvedev will meet Friday to discuss efforts to reach a new arms control treaty. The two will meet on the sidelines of the climate change conference in Copenhagen.
Tadić to attend Copenhagen conference
President Boris Tadić will head a state delegation in the final part of the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen on December 18. The Serbian president’s press service announced on Tuesday that the delegation will include Minister of Environment and Spatial Planning Oliver Dulić.
U.S. Commerce Secretary Touts Climate Change Policies
Commerce Secretary Gary Locke tells delegates at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen that nations must stop subsidizing the production and consumption of fossil fuels and create incentives for innovative solutions to clean energy.
– U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke Dec. 11 used the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen to tout
the Obama administration’s track record on clean energy, but stressed that
ultimately solutions will be pioneered by the private sector.
quot;I am proud to say that since taking off…
10 Lessons Learned from Climate Scientists’ Stolen E-Mails
NEWS ANALYSIS: The United Nations Climate Change Conference Conference is under way in Copenhagen, but as scientists’ stolen e-mails become front-page news, it’s important for us to take a step back and consider the ramifications of poor e-mail security and what lessons IT managers and security administrators can learn from this incident.
– As the United Nations Climate Change Conference, or COP
15, in Copenhagen, Denmark,
gets under way this week, the
summit has been muddied a bit by the details found in scientists’ stolen e-mails.
The e-mails contain information that has given those who believe global warming
concerns are overbl…
Ban discusses climate in Mongolia
By Michael Kohn
BBC News, Ulan Bator

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon spent his second full day in Mongolia talking tough on climate change, meeting with Mongolia’s leaders and the public.
Mr Ban emphasised how landlocked, developing countries like Mongolia are suffering the consequences of pollution created elsewhere in the world.
During his stay, Mr Ban has camped out in a yurt on the grassy steppes.
He has also observed and thanked Mongolian peacekeepers that have served overseas.
A military band struck up a lively tune when Mr Ban arrived at the Tavan Tolgoi training camp.
Blue-helmeted Mongolian peacekeepers stood at attention as Mr Ban reviewed the troops.
He then thanked the soldiers deployed under the UN flag to far-flung places like Sierra Leone and Afghanistan.
By visiting Tavan Tolgoi, Mr Ban hopes to throw the spotlight on Mongolia as a model for other developing countries.
Mongolia has fewer than three million people and a small economy, but it also has a functioning democracy with a robust civil society.
Mongolia’s peacekeepers are helping to put the country on the international stage.
But as Mr Ban pointed out, Mongolia also remains vulnerable to climate change, with possible water shortages and desertification threatening the traditional nomadic lifestyle.
Mr Ban said he came here to listen to ordinary people faced with mounting climate problems, issues that he hopes to address in December at the UN Climate Change conference in Copenhagen. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




Thom Yorke and environmentalist Tony Juniper at the United Nations Climate Change Conference