There's money to be made from environmental catastrophe
Debate on Global Warming Helps Produce a Brisk Seller
By IAN AUSTEN, New York Times
Published: May 1, 2006
Canada's Conservative government, which was elected in January, has been distancing itself from the greenhouse gas emission cuts the country promised to make under the Kyoto Protocol, the climate treaty requiring reductions.
And along the way, the environment minister, Rona Ambrose, has helped turn an obscure science-fiction novel about global warming into a widely known book title in Canada.
"Hotter Than Hell" describes a war between Canada and the United States over fresh water in the wake of a global-warming catastrophe.
(The rest is here.)
By IAN AUSTEN, New York Times
Published: May 1, 2006
Canada's Conservative government, which was elected in January, has been distancing itself from the greenhouse gas emission cuts the country promised to make under the Kyoto Protocol, the climate treaty requiring reductions.
And along the way, the environment minister, Rona Ambrose, has helped turn an obscure science-fiction novel about global warming into a widely known book title in Canada.
"Hotter Than Hell" describes a war between Canada and the United States over fresh water in the wake of a global-warming catastrophe.
(The rest is here.)
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