out of the sky. humanity has put a trillion extra tons of carbon into the sea and sky. now it s not jenough to get off of oil and gas. we have to capture that carbon and lock it back into the slow cycle, under rock or seabeds. this industry is just kicking off. inflation reduction money will unlock a lot more now. but this is the very tiny beginning of this industry when you have to build the oil industry in reverse. all the smokestacks pumping into the sky, take those and put them back in the earth. amazing. so the u.s. is now actively studying something called stratospheric solar intervention to buy time for this global decarbonization. what is that and is that realistic? this is a growing debate. the idea of mimicking a volcano. w volcano / it lowers the temperature, the shade of a a year for a couple of years with no real ill effects.
With an aim to harness the Blue Economy, the Deep Ocean Mission of the Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES) was approved by the Cabinet six months ago envisaging exploration of deep ocean resources, especially Polymetallic Nodules, from 6000 m depth.
effectively. i wanted to put the emphasis on us on our responsibility to try and solve the crisis. the hardest sculptures already adorn many seabeds around the world like here in mexico the art evolves over time as coral and other marine life move in there like artwork so conservation. will fundamentally it s to kind of show us living in this kind of symbiotic relationship in a in a culture of better balance with nature instead of a sort of dominating the landscape we re actually being colonized and maybe absorbed back into the into the planet. the first sculptures were submerged here in los colorado stay at the start of february twenty sixth team nature will eventually make its mark on them to put in cold water like this even taylor can predict what will happen over the next few years the atlantic ocean it is just really really
. the artists sculptures already adorn many seabeds around the world like here in mexico the art evolves over time as coral and other marine life move in there like artwork conservation. will fundamentally is to kind of show us living in this kind of symbiotic relationship in a in a kind of better balance with nature instead of us sort of dominating the landscape we re actually being colonized and maybe absolved back into the into the planet. the first sculptures were submerged here in must colorado space at the start of february twenty sixth team nature will eventually make its mark on them to put in cold water like this even taylor can predict what will happen over the next few years to the atlantic ocean this is just really really interesting is this incredibly deep sort of blue which i have witnessed and in other parts i ve worked
very, very bloody. and as we ve seen from those pictures on youtube and elsewhere, the regime is pulling out every stop, doing everything possible to crush this rebellion with violence. there s a lot of bloodshed. as you said, over 200 people killed, perhaps many, many more. chris? ron allen, thank you so much, from cairo with that update. tomorrow iranian warships are expected to pass through the suez canal for the first time in more than three decades. israeli leaders are expressing grave concern over having the ships pass into the mediterranean. egyptian officials say they ve been told the ships will not carry weapons or chemical materials. the cleanup apparently far from over in the gulf of mexico. environmental scientists say there is still a significant amount of oil in seabeds and along gulf shorelines. officials say they ll continue to monitor spill areas for long-term impacts on marine life. we are paying more at the pump. a new survey says the average price for regula