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Czech ScienceCzech scientists take part in International Polar Year in both Polar Regions

04-01-2007 14:55 | Pavla Horáková

Antarctica The North and South Poles are not exactly the world's most popular destinations for tourists, but their rich mineral deposits and unspoiled environments make them a godsend for scientists. A number of Czech researchers will be going to these remote outposts in the coming months as part of the International Polar Year, which is dedicated to coordinated polar research. This project will actually last a full two years starting from March 2007 until March 2009 and many Czech scientists from different fields will be participating in the studies. More

Talking PointCzech firms benefit from carbon trading scheme, but climate change seems here to stay

19-12-2006 14:36 | Ilya Marritz

Photo: European Commission Years from now, 2006 may be remembered as the year the world started to get really scared about global warming. Al Gore's film "An Inconvenient Truth", was a hit, and here in the Czech Republic, record breaking temperatures in summer and autumn got people murmuring that climate change is already here.  More

Czech ScienceEU campaign calls on young people to help reduce greenhouse emissions

14-09-2006 13:37 | Pavla Horáková

Turn down. Switch off. Recycle. Walk. Change. Those are five simple recommendations the European Commission is calling on people to follow in an effort to raise awareness of climate change and possible ways to reduce its speed.  More

Current AffairsTemperatures rising, but are summers really not what they used to be?

23-06-2006 13:37 | Rob Cameron

Photo: CTK The mercury's rising here in the Czech Republic, with maximum daytime temperatures sitting comfortably at 30 degrees Celsius for days on end, and thunderstorms becoming a regular feature of the evenings. Pubs and ice-cream salesmen might be rejoicing in the tropical weather, but those people wilting in stuffy offices or baking in cars are of course less enthusiastic. Rob Cameron reports.  More

Business NewsWhat do Czech industries think of the EU Emissions Trading plan?

11-11-2004 | Jan Velinger

Next year the European Union will launch the opening phase of its ambitious Emissions Trading programme, which planners hope will help to reduce the union's overall greenhouse gas emissions. In line with the EU Emissions Trading Directive, as of 2005 individual EU members will be required to meet pre-set emissions caps spelled out in countries' National Allocation Plans. However, companies affected under the legislation will also be given emissions allowances, which, if saved, will be possible to trade as credit on a newly-emerging - and some believe - potentially lucrative market.  More

Current AffairsOld cars must be dismantled in official scrap yards under new EU regulations

29-07-2004 | Jarka Hálková

Abandoning an old car without a licence plate in a remote area used to be a common way of getting rid of an unwanted vehicle here in the Czech Republic. But European Union accession has changed the rules for drivers as well as for owners of car breaking yards.  More

Czech ScienceCzech scientists: health effects of air pollution in humans can show after decades

25-05-2004 | Pavla Horáková

Photo: European Commission Pioneering research by Czech scientists suggests that the quality of the air we breathe may affect our health for decades to come. In the early 1980s the most serious pollutant in this country was sulphur dioxide, produced mainly by coal-fired power plants and households using coal for heating.  More

SpotlightHradec Kralove Solar and Ozone Observatory

27-08-2003 | Ian Willoughby

Hradec Kralove Solar and Ozone Observatory This week I've come to the east Bohemian town of Hradec Kralove, to the Czech Republic's only solar and ozone observatory, which was established over half a century ago, in 1951. My guide is a physicist named Karel Vanicek, who has been working here since the mid 1970s. Of course ozone depletion is now a well-known problem and I asked Mr Vanicek when he and his colleagues in Hradec first began to notice that the ozone layer was starting to disappear.  More

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