Recent Videos
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Instructions |
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Instructions |
| The "Recent Videos" pages allow the user to search for all videos that have been cataloged by the MyCCNews system (over 4500).
- The sytem allows the users to specify the number of videos that are listed by changing the specification for the number of rows and columns.
- Note that the images zize is based on tne number of colums.
- The system also allows for text searching of the title and description ("wild cards" are allowed).
- Videos for a specific organization or playlist can be selected by choosing the appopraate entry from the "Organization" dropdown list.
- Once all of the changes are made, click the "Apply" button.
- Clicking on image will open the video for viewing.
- The "number of views" will be updated on a weekly basis.
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Methane Matter: Strategic Communications For Climate Action - Apr 29, 2024 Climate Engineering (Lockley - Playlist) (70 Views;55 min.) |
| Cutting methane pollution is the fastest opportunity we have to immediately slow the rate of global warming. The climate movement needs smart, strategic communications and grassroots organizing campaigns to win the policies to phase out dirty, expensive gas and boost cleaner, all electric alternatives. On April 26th, 2024, the Yale Center for Environmental Communication hosted a conversation with Sonal Jessel, former Director of Policy at WE ACT for Environmental Justice, Sarah Lazarovic, Vice President, Communications and Creative Strategy at Rewiring America, and Phoebe Sweet, Founder \u0026 President - Acadia Strategies, and co-founder of the Gas Leaks Project. Joshua Low, Partnerships Director at the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication moderated the webinar. |
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Zoom into the Horsehead Nebula - Apr 29, 2024 PHYS.ORG - Earth (6,519 Views;2 min.) |
| This video takes the viewer on a journey through space to reveal a new image from the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope, the Horsehead Nebula. \n\nThis zoom video features three unique views of the Horsehead Nebula, including images from as ESA’s Euclid telescope, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope’s infrared view of the object, and finally revealing the new image from Webb's NIRCam (Near-InfraRed Camera) instrument. It is the sharpest infrared image of the object to date, showing a part of the iconic nebula in a whole new light, and capturing its complexity with unprecedented spatial resolution. You can learn more about this new image here.\n\nMore information and download options: http://esawebb.org/videos/weic2411c/\n\nCredit:\nESA/Webb, NASA, CSA, K. Misselt (University of Arizona) and A. Abergel (IAS/University Paris-Saclay, CNRS) \nMusic: Stellardrone - The Night Sky in Motion |
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Changing Weather Patterns - What's Next? - Apr 28, 2024 Facing Future (3,358 Views;32 min.) |
| As weather patterns change, bringing stronger storms and droughts, we need to free more land to absorb flooding, recover hydrology and enhance natural systems to sequester CO2. \n\nOur automotive age has brought unprecedented mobility, at a steep cost. From extraction to tailpipe emissions, gas cars are an environmental disaster. To accommodate the car, whole #Ecosystems have been lost as paved surfaces cover soil and absorb heat. EVs will not change that. Add to that, the ¾ of arable land converted to animal agriculture - and we have a recipe for disaster. What can we do about it? \n\nBill Selby, Emeritus Professor at Santa Monica College, \nAuthor, The California Skywatcher, Understanding #WeatherPatterns \nPaul Beckwith , Climate Scientist\nDale Walkonen, Host\n\nhttps://www.heydaybooks.com/catalog/the-california-sky-watcher/\n\nEdited by Michael Barba and Mike Coe\nThumbnail, Eric Dehais\n\nFor more information about #ClimateChange, visit the FacingFuture Library at ... |
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Fighting Plastic Pollution: Time for Change | UN Environment Programme | United Nations - Apr 28, 2024 Climate Change (United Nations - Playlist) (958 Views;2 min.) |
| Since the 1950s, plastic has become so ubiquitous that it's now used in everything from children’s toys and medical equipment to beauty products and airplanes. And while plastic was once hailed as a miracle product, we now know the damage plastic pollution does to ecosystems, the climate, human health and the economy.\n\nCentral to ending plastic pollution is the elimination of unnecessary plastic, the redesign of products – including packaging – so they can be more easily reused, repaired and recycled, and switching to non-plastic substitutes that help protect the environment, human health, and our economy. \n\nSo, it's time to write a new story and #beatplasticpollution!\n\nJoin us and take action: http://www.unep.org/beatplasticpollution\n\nVideo produced by UN Environment Programme (UNEP). |
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How China is winning the GREEN ENERGY race. - Apr 28, 2024 Just Have A Think (47,074 Views;20 min.) |
| China's perceived march towards global domination appears to be ruffling some feathers here in the Western world. Their version of the industrial revolution has lifted hundreds of millions out of abject poverty, but it is still held up by some as the greatest modern sin against humanity and our climate. So, how accurate is that allegation?\n\nHelp support this channels independence at \nhttp://www.patreon.com/justhaveathink \n\nOr with a donation via Paypal by clicking here\nhttps://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick\u0026hosted_button_id=GWR73EHXGJMAE\u0026source=url \n\nYou can also help keep my brain ticking over during the long hours of research and editing via the nice folks at BuyMeACoffee.com \n\nhttps://www.buymeacoffee.com/justhaveathink\n\nVideo Transcripts available at our website \n\nhttp://www.justhaveathink.com \n\nReference links\n\nRead Michael Barnard's recent articles about China ... |
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Young Indigenous Activists Fight to Save Their Languages and Cultures | United Nations - Apr 26, 2024 Climate Change (United Nations - Playlist) (1,280 Views;4 min.) |
| During the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, young activists discuss their lives and efforts to preserve their languages and cultures: \n\nRayen Rupayan: Instagram @wechekeche.ka.itrofillmongen\n\nShaylin Salas\n\nKseniia Bolshakova: Instagram @haka.huruksut\n\n--------------------\n\nWhat is the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues\n\nThe Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues is an advisory body to the Economic and Social Council, established on 28 July 2000. The Forum has the mandate to discuss indigenous issues related to economic and social development, culture, the environment, education, health, and human rights.\n\nAccording to its mandate, the Permanent Forum provides expert advice and recommendations on indigenous issues to the Council, as well as to programs, funds, and agencies of the United Nations, through ECOSOC. It raises awareness and promotes the integration and coordination of activities related to indigenous issues within the UN system. It also prepares and ... |
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Low Carbon Materials’ CEO on Decarbonizing Construction - Apr 25, 2024 Climate Engineering (Lockley - Playlist) (59 Views;10 min.) |
| Natasha Boulding, Co-Founder \u0026 CEO of Low Carbon Materials shares how the climate tech startup is redefining concrete and bringing circularity to this hard-to-abate industry at the Bloomberg Sustainable Business Summit 2024 in London. \r\n--------\r\nSubscribe to Bloomberg Live on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7UFcUbAd8oyCBWCogVpJ6g?sub_confirmation=1 |
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Pass the salt please. Power lies within - Apr 25, 2024 PHYS.ORG - Technology (14 Views;1 min.) |
| A green industrial future for Europe may depend on an element that is part of a household staple: table salt.\n \nDr John Abou-Rjeily, a researcher at Tiamat Energy in France, is using sodium to develop rechargeable batteries. Sodium is one of the most abundant elements on Earth and is a part of sodium chloride, an ionic compound that is the technical name for ordinary salt.\n\nClick here for the full story âž¡ï¸https://bit.ly/4bbyebW\n\n #ResearchImpactEU |
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Trinidad & Tobago Fights Against Plastic Pollution | United Nations - Apr 25, 2024 Climate Change (United Nations - Playlist) (615 Views;22 min.) |
| Small Island Developing States are particularly vulnerable to plastic pollution. As well as coping with a tsunami of waste washes up on their beaches every day, these countries – highly dependent on imports – generate a large amount of plastic waste of their own, and often struggle to manage it.\n\nPlastic pollution has a detrimental effect on the health and livelihoods of people living in small island states, which often lack the means to effectively treat and process it. It’s not great for the economy either: tourists don’t want to hang out on dirty beaches, and marine litter can damage fishing stocks.\n\nConor Lennon from UN News went to Trinidad \u0026 Tobago to see how the UN is working with civil society and the government to not only deal with the waste, but also find a way to reuse it, and take it out of the environment. |
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Promoting Climate Action and Green Growth in the Western Balkans and Beyond - Apr 24, 2024 Climate Change (World Bank - Playlist) (273 Views;3 min.) |
| With the support of Austria's Federal Ministry of Finance and the World Bank, the Climate Support Facility's Western Balkans Plus Program has been promoting climate action and green growth across the countries of the Western Balkan Six since 2020 and expanded its activities intro Central Asia in 2023. This program shows that international collaboration, innovation, and timely funding can enable countries to address crucial climate and environmental challenges and build a more sustainable, resilient future for all. Learn more: http://wrld.bg/Ajeg50Ro9mv #climateaction\n\n00:00 The Western Balkans climate challenge\n00:27 Climate Support Facility Western Balkans Program\n00:45 Program expansion beyond Western Balkans\n01:20 Western Balkans and Central Asia impact stories\n01:53 Outro\n\nWatch more videos on https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL358C0E2C2BADEECA\n\nABOUT THE WORLD BANK 🌠The World Bank is one of the world’s largest sources of funding and knowledge for ... |
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Underwater robot pioneers new energy-efficient buoyancy control - Apr 25, 2024 PHYS.ORG - Technology (43 Views;2 min.) |
| A remotely operated underwater robot built by a team of Rice University engineering students pioneers a new way to control buoyancy via water-splitting fuel cells. The device, designed and constructed at the Oshman Engineering Design Kitchen over the course of a year-long senior design capstone class, offers a more power-efficient method of maintaining neutral buoyancy ⎯ a critical component in underwater operations. |
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What is a Diagnostic? - Apr 30, 2024 PHYS.ORG - Earth (163 Views;2 min.) |
| How do scientists know what’s happening inside a fusion reaction? Jonathan Klabacha, ITER diagnostic team lead at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), explains how researchers use diagnostics to measure and gather critical information. #fusion #energy #diagnostic #plasma\n\nITER is a multinational facility under assembly in France to study plasma that can heat itself and sustain its own fusion reactions. PPPL is a partner laboratory in US ITER, which is managed by Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) with PPPL and Savannah River National Laboratory. With contributions from universities and industry, US ITER is delivering hardware design and manufacturing for 12 essential ITER systems. The completed diagnostics will probe the plasma, an electrically charged soup of electrons and atomic nuclei, revealing important information that could improve the efficiency of ITER and other doughnut-shaped fusion devices known as tokamaks.\n\nPPPL is a leader in developing the ... |
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Baku Olympic Stadium - Apr 24, 2024 Climate Change News - Politics (33 Views;1 min.) |
| While 84,000 delegates attended COP28 in Dubai, just 40,000-50,000 are expected at COP29 in Baku and COP30 in Belém Some of Indonesia's delegation arrive at Cop28 in Dubai (Photos: Kiara Worth) UN climate chief Simon Stiell has said he hopes to see fewer people attend the annual COP climate negotiations after participants at COP28 in Dubai last December hit a record high of nearly 84,000. Stiell said this month that he personally “would certainly like to see future COPs reduce in size”, telling an audience at London’s Chatham House think-tank that “bigger doesn’t necessarily mean better”. In Dubai, where the 2023 summit was held from November 30 to December 13, the Expo City site was so large that important delegates were ferried around on golf buggies while electric scooters were available to get around the public area, known as the Green Zone. “Size does not necessarily translate to the quality of outcomes,” Stiell said in London, noting ... |
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Parque da Cidade de BeleÌm - Apr 24, 2024 Climate Change News - Politics (16 Views;1 min.) |
| While 84,000 delegates attended COP28 in Dubai, just 40,000-50,000 are expected at COP29 in Baku and COP30 in Belém Some of Indonesia's delegation arrive at Cop28 in Dubai (Photos: Kiara Worth) UN climate chief Simon Stiell has said he hopes to see fewer people attend the annual COP climate negotiations after participants at COP28 in Dubai last December hit a record high of nearly 84,000. Stiell said this month that he personally “would certainly like to see future COPs reduce in size”, telling an audience at London’s Chatham House think-tank that “bigger doesn’t necessarily mean better”. In Dubai, where the 2023 summit was held from November 30 to December 13, the Expo City site was so large that important delegates were ferried around on golf buggies while electric scooters were available to get around the public area, known as the Green Zone. “Size does not necessarily translate to the quality of outcomes,” Stiell said in London, noting ... |
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Solar geoengineering: Can it solve the climate crisis? - Apr 23, 2024 Climate Engineering (Lockley - Playlist) (3,257 Views;5 min.) |
| On top of cutting down on emissions, solar geoengineering is being touted as an alternative approach to slow global warming — but it is also an unproven technology. \n\nDebate is especially growing about stratospheric aerosol injection, a type of solar geoengineering which could someday help slow the effects of climate change. \n\nEric Sorensen explains the science, benefits and concerns of this potential solution to the climate crisis.\n\nFor more info, please go to https://globalnews.ca\nSubscribe to Global News Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/20fcXDc\nLike Global News on Facebook HERE: http://bit.ly/255GMJQ\nFollow Global News on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1Toz8mt\nFollow Global News on Instagram HERE: https://bit.ly/2QZaZIB\n#GlobalNews #solargeoengineering #climatecrisis |
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SUPPORT! Nakivale: Refugee-Led Biochar Enterprise in Uganda. - Apr 23, 2024 Open Air (Carbon Capture) (22 Views;4 min.) |
| Farmer entrepreneurs in Nakivale, Uganda, Africa's oldest refugee settlement, are on the brink of taking their biochar production from pilot to sustainable business. With your generous help we can help them get there, improving deteriorated soil, reducing food insecurity and removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.\n\nIn 2023, OpenAir members all over the world helped crowdfund phase 1 of this project, funding the manufacture and installation of three biochar kilns in Nakivale. Since that time, the team has been recruited and trained, a regular supply of local waste biomass has been secured, and production has been ramping up daily for several months.\n\nThis amazing progress owes to the commitment and creativity of the Nakivale team, lead by Marius Iragi, himself a Congolese refugee living in the settlement. \n\nIn the coming weeks, enough quality data will have been submitted to enable an independent audit. Pending positive assessment by the auditor, the project will then ... |
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100% wind and solar is coming! - Apr 21, 2024 Just Have A Think (68,219 Views;18 min.) |
| 100% electrification from renewables like wind, solar, geothermal and hydro power, backed up with interconnections and energy storage is now just around the corner, and already the cheapest option available. But there are still bumps in the road. Can we overcome them in time? Help support this channels independence at http://www.patreon.com/justhaveathink Or with a donation via Paypal by clicking here https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=GWR73EHXGJMAE'source=url You can also help keep my brain ticking over during the long hours of research and editing via the nice folks at BuyMeACoffee.com https://www.buymeacoffee.com/justhaveathink Video Transcripts available at our website http://www.justhaveathink.com Reference links Friends of the Earth Policy document https://policy.friendsoftheearth.uk/insight/how-england-can-produce-more-onshore-renewable-energy-fast RIPPLE ... |
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