It’s time to eat some oil-slicked crow, in the wake of the Gulf Oil Spill disaster, which shines a bright light on a legacy of problems.

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BP as Greenest Oil Company? FAIL
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Brasilia, Brazil: Proposed changes to Brazil's forest laws that will cut back protection and offer wide ranging amnesties for illegal deforestation threaten to undo the country's impressive performances in cutting back emissions and protecting biodiversity. ... - China’s CO2 emissions rise sharply
China's carbon dioxide emissions rose 10.4 percent in 2010 compared with the previous year, as global emissions rose at their fastest rate for more than four decades, data released by BP on Wednesday showed. "All forms of energy grew strongly (last year), with growth in fossil fu... - Tropical countries struggle to engage with REDD+
Most tropical developing countries are struggling to monitor and report their greenhouse gas emissions from forest loss, and will need international support to implement the UN REDD+ scheme, according to a study. The Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) sc... - U.N. climate talks in Bonn wrap up after fresh fights
by Agence France-Presse BONN, Germany -- Three days of talks aimed at putting a new gloss on U.N. climate talks ended here late Sunday after new textual trench warfare, less than four months after a stormy summit in Copenhagen. Countries wrangled for hours beyond the scheduled cl... - A Sustainable America’s Cup Race
Although the America's Cup is one of the most globally recognized names in sport, it remains relatively unwatched in its namesake country. That's likely to change in 2013 when the cup roars into San Francisco Bay – the first time in modern history that it will be easily viewable ...

















