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Time Magazine - Tue Dec 1, 12:40 pm ET
Leaked e-mails have raised questions about whether a scientist tried tomanipulate global warming data. But the world's leading researchers insisttheir science is sound
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Enterprise Security Today - Thu Dec 3, 3:09 am ET
More than a decade of correspondence between British and U.S. scientists is included in about 1,000 e-mails and 3,000 documents posted on web sites following the security breach.
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Enterprise Security Today - Thu Dec 3, 3:04 am ET
Unknown hackers stole thousands of e-mails and documents, dating from 1996 to 2009, from the University of East Anglia. In the e-mails, researchers discuss problems with data, models and outside critics of their research.
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UPI - Wed Dec 2, 6:28 pm ET
CANBERRA, Australia, Dec. 2 (UPI) -- The Australian government's carbon emissions trading scheme failed to win passage Wednesday through the Senate, landing a blow to a key policy of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.
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Contra Costa Times - Thu Dec 3, 2:27 am ET
Conservatives who reject global warming concerns assail 'Climategate"'
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Fox News - Wed Dec 2, 4:17 pm ET
Obama Official Skews Doubts Over Global Warming
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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Thu Dec 3, 12:39 am ET
A Penn State University climatologist sits at the center of the international scandal spawned by hacked e-mails from a British university that have stirred controversy over global-warming research.
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The Appleton Post-Crescent - 58 minutes ago
WASHINGTON As world leaders prepare for a new round of global warming negotiations, Gov. Jim Doyle wants them to know that Wisconsin and other Midwestern states arent waiting for an international edict to curb greenhouse gas emissions.
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redOrbit - Wed Dec 2, 5:19 pm ET
The University of East Anglia said Tuesday that the chief of a prestigious British research center caught in a storm of controversy over claims that he and others suppressed data about climate change has stepped down pending an investigation, The Associated Press reported.Phil Jones, whose e-mails were among the thousands of pieces of correspondence leaked to the Internet late last month, will ...
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Summit Daily News - 1 hour 40 minutes ago
SALT LAKE CITY - Ski resorts across the country used the Thanksgiving weekend to jump start their winter seasons, but with every passing year comes a frightening realization: If global temperatures continue to rise, fewer and fewer resorts will be able to open for the traditional beginning of ski season. Warmer temperatures at night are making it more difficult to make snow and the snow that ...
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EARTHtimes.org - 37 minutes ago
Brussels- Current world pledges on reducing greenhouse gas emissions are close to the level necessary to prevent catastrophic global warming, but they are not yet enough, one of the world's top climate experts said Thursday. The comments came just ah...
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San Jose Mercury News - Wed Dec 2, 8:59 pm ET
Online tool revealed as part of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's release of sweeping climate report.
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FOX 11 Reno - Thu Dec 3, 1:05 am ET
Google Inc. launched a new feature in its Google Earth Web site Wednesday designed to let Californians see the risks of climate change.
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UPI - Wed Dec 2, 10:43 am ET
LONDON, Dec. 2 (UPI) -- Britain shouldn't let the current strain on public finances delay efforts to fight global warming, a top climate change economist said.
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Park Hills Daily Journal - 2 hours 1 minutes ago
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Countries most vulnerable to climate change said Friday they were incensed that rich nations were rethinking the timetable for concluding a global treaty that would hold them to legally binding targets for cutting emissions.
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AP via Yahoo! News - Tue Dec 1, 6:29 pm ET
The chief of a prestigious British research center caught in a storm of controversy over claims that he and others suppressed data about climate change has stepped down pending an investigation, the University of East Anglia said Tuesday.
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EARTHtimes.org - 37 minutes ago
Brussels - Current world pledges on reducing greenhouse gas emissions are close to the level necessary to prevent catastrophic global warming, but they are not yet enough, one of the world's top climate experts said Thursday. The comments came just a...
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Bloomberg - Wed Dec 2, 7:04 am ET
Dec. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Brazil, whose Amazonia rainforest is the biggest in the world, wants a new climate agreement to limit the use of forests to slow global warming, putting a crimp on investors hoping to create carbon credits from trees.
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Arizona Daily Wildcat - Thu Dec 3, 2:41 am ET
I’ll just get it out in the open: I don’t care what happens in the climate change debate. Not even a made up word like “fidoodling” can describe what people have done to turn an environmental issue into a political one. As a consequence, I don’t care terribly much anymore.
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Yale Daily News - 2 hours 43 minutes ago
The world’s oceans are absorbing less carbon dioxide, which could cause global temperatures to rise even faster than they have risen in past five decades, Yale geophysicist Jeffrey Park found in a recent study.