Monday, May 11, 2009

Black Tuesday Acrostic Poem

: Dix-Sept millions de menaces Vietnamiens sun

" About 17 million Vietnamese could lose their homes if sea level rises a meter because of global climate change, "said Mark Lowcock, the English Department for International Development (DFID), in a report presented on February 5 Hanoi at an international roundtable on global climate change.
Vietnam, countries in developing and industrializing, " figure in the group of countries likely to be strongly affected by environmental problems caused by climate change, said Mark Lowcock. L 'one-meter rise in sea levels could submerge 12.2% of Vietnam's land and forcing 17 million people to relocate . "Climate change is already happening in Vietnam. On average, temperatures are rising each decade to 0.1 ° C. During the summer months, there is an increase of 0.1 ° C to 0.3 ° C / decade, "said Nguyen Khac Hieu, Deputy Head of Department of International Cooperation (Vietnamese Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment). The main reason rising sea levels is the release of gases into the atmosphere causing temperatures to rise (global warming). According to environmental experts, gas releases in Vietnam should be 2.3 times larger in 2010 that 'in 1994. In 2010, temperatures in Vietnam have increased from 0.3 ° to 0.5 ° C, the sea level of 9 cm and 33 cm in 2050, 45 cm in 2070. To face this problem, "the British government has committed to provide a grant of at least $ 500 million within 5 years to come," said Mark Lowcock. "
Vietnam has proposed measures to reduce its emissions of greenhouse gases," said Nguyen Khac Hieu. The country has also developed a project to recover waste gas from Rang Dong oil field, with a target reduction of 6.7 million tonnes of CO2 emissions in 10 years. A project that is appreciated by the international community.
In 2007, le pays des poursuivra ses projets de construction dans des villes et cuves biogas tỉnh, avec comme objectif d'un million de cuves ICI 2010 par les Pays-Bas financees.
Spiritual Exercises / CVN (07/02/2007)

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