Ironically, the UAE has appointed Sultan Al Jaber, the Chief Executive Officer of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC), one of the world’s largest oil producers, to preside over COP28.
work on this. it s great that you ve been pointing out that first of all, there s a lot of co2 emission when you create these massive wind farms. you have to create the concrete and bring it out to sea and erect these massive virtual signals off the ocean floor that go up above the water and you have the big turbines, which a lot of those materials are created in china and they use a lot of burn a lot of c 02 making them. we also have the whale issue, the sound as the turbines go around on a big wind project, it s extremely destructive to whales. it also, when you create this network of wind farms offshore, you really disrupt their habitat. so on top of it all, just to make the environmental economic madness of this picture
responsible climate change investment. we are doing that. well, i m sure they re talking about, because they know it s good pr. as the documents show, they re working to have lobbyists kill climate legislation. they can t have it both ways. they can t call themselves clean companies and commit to business plans to increase co2 emission. what was the most shocking thing to you. it was the culture in these oil companies. these companies have a culture of intimidation and bullying, and that s what s got to change. do you think this report realistically could help change that culture? i think it sets the foundation. we re going to be referring the report to other agencies, which will announce soon, but it s going to take more work. it s going to take mobilization, people more than a house subcommittee with more resources looking into the millions of documents. we haven t had the resources to look into all of the documents or get all of the documents, but i think it s this first s
Qatar World Cup: FIFA World Cup 2022 Qatar organisers have billed the event as the first carbon-neutral tournament in history. But critics say the claims are "misleading" to the public and warn that the competition poses a slew of other environmental problems from waste to water-use.