How will the world produce more, cleaner  energy? Climate communications expert Richard Black sets out a vision for the future which could benefit us all. Coal, oil and gas provide four-fifths of the energy that powers our modern world. But continuing to burn them will mean wrecking the only planet we have. Is there a way out? In The Future of Energy, journalist and analyst Richard Black argues that there is, and that the transition to a clean energy world is already underway. He shows that with just five key technologies we can replace the burning of fossil fuels almost entirely, as quickly as society decides. Doing so will do much more than halt climate change. The transition will bring cheaper energy, cleaner air, and more jobs. It will remove some of the factors behind oppression, injustice, and conflict. And it is supported by an overwhelming majority of the world&rsquo s population. This may not be the story of energy that you hear most about from politicians, business leaders and journalists, but it is the one that matters.
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Modellbausatz im Massstab 1:144. Er wird mit einem Stecksystem, farblich passenden Teilen, Zubehör und einer vollständig illustrierten Bauanleitung geliefert. Du brauchst weder Farbe noch Klebstoff.
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"David Mamet has raised outrage to an art form. . . . Oleanna is a scorcher. The woods are burning, and all of us are being seared in the fire. Boston Globe Mamet s clenched fist to the gut and intellect a vicious and timely riff on sexual harassment and political correctness. Pinter, Albee, Miller. They re all looking over Mamet s shoulder. New York Wholly absorbing a virtuoso performance As if ripped right from the typewriter, it could not be more direct in its technique or incendiary in its ambition. . . . Oleanna is likely to provoke more arguments than any other play this year. The New York Times Our foremost master of the language of moral epilepsy. Newsweek.
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'A gem of a book about mothers and daughters, about being Black and working class in today's London. Beautiful writing, taut with emotion, poetry and insight' Priscilla Morris, Women's Prize shortlisted author of Black Butterflies For a year, the three of them live in the flat below Earl's on the Blossom View Estate. Livia, who has been running for long enough to think her past might never catch up with her. But now she's been forced to catch her breath and face the daughter she left behind. Mickey, who is angry: about having a mother who left, a father who died, about the mess she's made of her life. And with no other place to go, she's forced to need the very person who abandoned her. And Summer, whose new grandmother is weird, and whose mum is always sad or out looking for men to distract her. Left to roam, she seeks refuge with new friends, ones who are willing to give her the attention that Mickey won't. But who are these kind strangers, and will they keep her safe? When the year ends, the family of three becomes two. Burning with hope and desire, this is a debut novel about motherhood, class and race, which sings a soulful song about the damage we do to the people we love most.
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