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CNN - Thu Nov 26, 11:17 am ET
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao will attend a major U.N. climate-change summit next month in Denmark, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said Thursday.
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The News-Herald - Thu Nov 26, 1:26 pm ET
SOUTHGATE — Sometimes being “green” can generate a little “green.”
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International Herald Tribune - Wed Nov 25, 10:35 am ET
The president decides to attend part of the climate change summit.
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Boston Globe - Thu Nov 26, 3:03 am ET
China announced plans Thursday to drastically boost its energy efficiency as part of its contribution to the fight against global warming.
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The Washington Times - Thu Nov 26, 6:44 am ET
CLIMATEGATE "A computer hacker in England has done the world a service by making available a huge quantity of evidence for the way in which 'human-induced global warming' claims have been advanced over the years," David Warren writes in the Ottawa Citizen, a Canadian newspaper. "By releasing into the Internet about a thousand internal e-mails from the servers of the Climate Research Unit in the ...
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New York Times - Wed Nov 25, 10:42 am ET
With proposals to reduce emissions tied to climate change stalled in Congress, a state works on its own cap-and-trade plan.
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Idaho State Journal - Thu Nov 26, 1:23 am ET
Posted: Wednesday, November 25, 2009 9:05 pm | Updated: 11:00 pm, Wed Nov 25, 2009. Putting his prestige on the line, President Barack Obama will personally commit the U.S. to a goal of substantially cutting greenhouse gases at next month's Copenhagen climate summit.
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AFP via Yahoo! News - 54 minutes ago
The Commonwealth is trying to shape the direction of upcoming climate talks in Copenhagen by inviting top outside leaders to a weekend summit here, host Trinidad said on Thursday.
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Washington Post - Wed Nov 25, 4:48 am ET
POST-ABC NEWS POLL | Percentage of U.S. that believes in global warming dips from 80 to 72.
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The Gainesville Sun - Thu Nov 26, 12:59 am ET
The Associated Press Putting his prestige on the line, President Barack Obama will personally commit the U.S. to a goal of substantially cutting greenhouse gases at next month's Copenhagen climate summit.
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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Thu Nov 26, 2:26 am ET
WASHINGTON -- President Obama is pledging a provisional target for reductions in greenhouse gas emissions in the United States, the first time in more than a decade that an American administration has offered even a tentative promise to reduce production of climate-altering gases, the White House announced Wednesday.
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AFP via Yahoo! News - Thu Nov 26, 3:31 am ET
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao will attend the climate change summit in Copenhagen next month to demonstrate his nation's willingness to work with the global community, the government said Thursday.
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US News & World Report - Wed Nov 25, 11:52 am ET
The president will pledge to cut CO2 emissions by 17 percent from 2005 levels by 2020.
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Washington Post - Thu Nov 26, 10:58 am ET
China announced Thursday that it will cut its economy's carbon intensity by up to 45 percent by 2020, the state news agency Xinhua said, and that Premier Wen Jiabao will participate in international climate negotiations in Copenhagen next month.
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CBS News - Wed Nov 25, 1:30 pm ET
Washington Post: Despite Drop, a Majority Still Support National Cap on Greenhouse Gas Emissions
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NPR - Wed Nov 25, 4:37 pm ET
E-mails stolen from a climate research center in England reveal that a small group of scientists has been pressuring scientific journals not to publish reports that cast doubt on climate change. The e-mails raise questions about the impartiality of the peer-review process, which is designed to keep poor science out of the technical literature.
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Post-Bulletin - Thu Nov 26, 12:08 pm ET
WASHINGTON -- Putting his prestige on the line, President Obama will personally commit the U.S. to a goal of substantially cutting greenhouse gases at next month's Copenhagen climate summit. He will insist America is ready to tackle
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AFP via Yahoo! News - Wed Nov 25, 7:05 am ET
New Zealand's parliament Wednesday approved a scheme aimed at curbing greenhouse gas emissions, but critics immediately said it did not go far enough in the fight against global warming.
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New York Times - Thu Nov 26, 7:27 am ET
President Obama and Prime Minister Wen Jiabao will attend the Copenhagen climate talks next month and have pledged new targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
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NPR - Thu Nov 26, 12:51 pm ET
The commitment from the world's largest polluter builds momentum ahead of a widely anticipated climate conference in Copenhagen next month. China pledges to reduce emissions by up to 45 percent as measured against its economic output.