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Showing posts with the label The environment

How bad are bananas? - book review

  How good is your carbon instinct? Unlike the book about virtual water, this book (albeit a revised version re-edited in 2020) is based on a concept little more familiar to the public tongue - the carbon footprint.  Similarly, this is a topic that has that has grown from a scary concept to a harsh reality since its original writing in 2010, whereas the concept of virtual water remains in its public infancy 10 years on from the book. Before I begin this report, I would like to address a common misconception I have witnessed across my A-Level study of climate change - a carbon footprint and carbon emissions are not exclusively to do with carbon dioxide.  Yes, carbon dioxide emissions are important and the increase in carbon dioxide production is a huge part of our role in enhancing the greenhouse effect, but the more "dangerous" greenhouse gas we tend to also produce on mass scale is methane.  It is considered to be 28 times more effective in radiation absorption (in ...

Virtual water - book review

Virtual water and the value of it I was made aware of this book during revision zoom call and I began reading without a clue about the concept or its importance.  I was a little disappointed that I had to order the book twice, the first being from Amazon where the printing was completely off and I could only read 3/4 of each page!  However, I found a second hand version so I hope this has now been addressed by the Amazon distributer. The concepts of blue water, green water and the way water may be traded goes beyond the specification of my current studies, however the book takes you on a story from explaining the concept and its origins to its possible future applications. Tony Allan at the time of writing was pessimistic about whether his publication will impact the current geopolitics that are destroying the delicate balance of the global hydrological cycle.  Sadly, little has changed in the last 10 years with our obliviousness to the way we trade this "embedded water" ...