Transcripts For KLAS Sunday Morning 20160117 archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
This morning. Cloud cover dave. Cloud cover. Yes unless youre up in the counties then on the colder side with some 20s and 30s up there. Lot of 40s and 50s up there. Still some snow up in the Sierra Nevada. Not done yet. For us we have mostly cloudy skies and could be a few sprinkles or light showers and some light rain especially in the mountains south but that continues. Partly sunny though by this afternoon. Kind of cool and breezy though. 40s for some and mid 50s for others and again cloud cover versus maybe some breaks in that cloud cover. But most locations or locales whatever you want to call them are saying mostly cloudy skies. San francisco which hit 59 yesterday, theyre 55 now. Im only going 60 for a high but it will be mostly sunny later today and temperatures staying cool. Theres the low and it will influence the weather today keeping the temperatures below average. Partly sunny could be a few sprinkles here this morning and some on my wind shield on the way in. With a lot
It is widely recognized that we must transition our energy economies to a greener, more sustainable state. This will only happen through the development of innovative technologies, and as a recent report from the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF) makes clear, trying to force the green transition with government regulations, subsidies, and exhortation will not work. The economic reality is that clean energy technologies must reach price/performance parity with dirty energy (P3).Yet most climate policy recommendations ignore what may well be the most promising source for innovations that will reach price/performance parity: biology. We have said it before, but it bears repeating: novel applications of synthetic biology have considerable potential to deliver lower carbon solutions to climate challenges. This is taken for granted in biomedicine, but for various reasons not so much in other fields.
Two University of California, Davis, researchers have won prestigious national and international awards in recognition of their work using genomics to address livestock health and crop resilience in the wake of a changing climate.