El "Templo del tigre 'de Tailandia era una fachada para la explotación comercial de huesos de tigre, pieles y otras partes para el lucrativo comercio internacional, escribe Simon Evans. No se hizo ninguna contribución a la conservación y los animales fueron sometidos a una extrema crueldad. Pero mientras que el cierre del templo es una buena noticia, hay cientos de granjas de tigres similares en toda la región que no son mejores…incluso son peores. El famoso 'templo del tigre' de Tailandia por fin se ha cerrado, después de casi dos décadas de controversia. La popular atracción turística, cerca de Bangkok permitió que los visitantes convivieran y posaran con los animales.
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La operación “IceBridge†completa su campaña de primavera 2016 en el Ãrtico
Operación IceBridge, un reconocimiento aéreo de la NASA de los hielos polares, puso fin a su octava campaña de primavera ártica el 21 de mayo Durante sus cinco semanas de operaciones, científicos de la misión realizaron seis vuelos de investigación sobre el hielo marino y diez sobre el hielo del planeta.
International Energy Agency targets 100 million electric cars by 2030
The International Energy Agency (IEA) is targeting 100 million electric cars on the roads by 2030 in order to avoid potentially damaging global warming. When you bear in mind that just 1.26 million electric cars were sold worldwide in 2015 is this out of the question or a possibility?
Renewable Energy Hit Record Levels in 2015
A new report confirms that 2015 was a record-breaking year for renewable energy in which 147 Gigawatts of renewable electricity came online.
That figure represents the largest annual increase ever recorded, and is due in part to the $286 billion invested in renewables. In fact, in 2015 almost twice as much money was spent on renewable energy, like solar and wind power, than fossil fuels like gas-fired power stations — only $130 billion.
This information comes as part of the Renewables Global Status Report authored by the global renewable energy policy network known as REN21.
Provisional names announced for super heavy elements 113, 115, 117, and 118
The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) Inorganic Chemistry Division has published a Provisional Recommendation for the names and symbols of the recently discovered superheavy elements 113, 115, 117, and 118.
The provisional names for 115, 117 and 118 -- originally proposed by the discovering team from the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, Dubna, Russia; the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California; and Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee -- will now undergo a statutory period for public review before the names and symbols can be finally approved by the IUPAC Council.
Tropical Depression 1E dissipates
Tropical Depression 1E or TD1E didn't get far from the time it was born to the time it weakened to a remnant low pressure area along the southwestern coast of Mexico. NOAA's GOES-West satellite captured an image of it remnant clouds.