Similar words: climate, acclimate, exchange rate, acclimatise, change, exchange, changeless, changeable. Meaning: n. a change in the world's climate.
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91. Locke said he has asked U.S. Energy Secretary Stephen Chu to join him on "a trip to China focusing on energy and on environmental protection and climate change."
92. Mr. Obama's focus on energy and climate change , experts said , cut both ways.
93. Nor did the many scientists at the United Nations'Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change IPCC.
94. Reality has a way of trumping art, and human - climate change is very real indeed.
95. Russia is said to be one of the few countries that might see a net benefit from climate change, in longer growing seasons and by opening lucrative northwest shipping passages as pack ice retreats.
96. A land of untouched beauty ,[www.Sentencedict.com] South America's Patagonia stands to be dramatically altered by climate change.
97. Crunch climate change talks may be doomed to failure in Copenhagen next month, with a legally binding deal on emissions now decreasingly likely, admitted leaders from across the Asia Pacific region.
98. The study, which was ordered by influential US military adviser Andrew Marshall, suggests that climate change should become an issue of national security rather than just a scientific discussion.
99. We have an unspoken collected pact to pretend climate change wasn't happening.
100. For health sectors to justify the large sums of money they will need if climate change does accelerate insect-borne disease, they must be able to convince governments that it is a high priority.
101. Think of climate change, financial instability, nuclear proliferation, resource shortages and terrorism.
102. Climate change is partly caused by increased concentrations of the gas carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
103. Global warming is beginning to affect the northern Japanese region of Hokkaido, with melting drift ice being one of the more noticeable effects of climate change.
104. They already believe in climate change and soft symbolic forms of mass action.
105. Matt Murphy, ornithologist for the Countryside Council for Wales said climate change was affecting the breeding patterns of pied flycatchers living in Welsh oak woodlands.
106. Scientists studying bears around the Beaufort sea, north of Alaska, claim this endurance feat could be a result of climate change.
107. Energy saving and a move to reduce climate change emissions have made compact florescent bulbs quite popular.
108. Science's editors predict that planetary science, paleoanthropology , primate genomics, climate change, whole-genome association studies, and optical lattices will be the areas to watch in 2007.
109. Corn was thought to be more resistant to rising temperatures than other crops. But results from crop trials in Africa suggest that climate change could hurt corn (Zea mays) production.
110. A far more substantial falling-out between Europe and China could be in store because of climate change.
111. Was Sir Nicholas's big report on climate change egalitarian, inegalitarian - or both?
112. The army may prove to be the first body upon which responsibility to deal with the effects of natural disaster (caused by climate change) for example will fall.
113. Hydrokinetic (wave, tidal, and current) power technologies could harness these widely available major energy sources — and mitigate climate change — in developed and developing countries alike.
114. To determine how climate change alters this biogeochemical cycle in Arctic lakes, Drevnick's team analyzed sediment cores from nine lakes in the Canadian Arctic and in Svalbard, Norway.
115. Carbon sequestration is a last resort to mitigating climate change.
116. Wang Tao, Sussex Energy Group, University of Sussex and Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, UK.
117. The US House of Representatives approved a cap-and-trade bill to fight climate change in 2009, but the Senate never approved such a measure.
118. The latest report from the Nobel - anointed Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change got blanket coverage it warranted.
119. The W.H.O. says different areas of the world will experience different problems from climate change.
120. Psychological research shows that most people in the UK don't feel personally threatened by climate change because it is vague, abstract and difficult to visualise.
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