Le Charbon
Le charbon est une roche sédimentaire combustible, riche en carbone, de couleur noire ou marron foncé, formée à partir de la dégradation partielle de la matière organique des végétaux. Il est exploité dans des mines, appelées charbonnages. Souvent appelé houille, il était autrefois appelé charbon de terre en opposition au charbon de bois. Source : wikipedia
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Jessica McKenzie
A recent UK national security assessment on biodiversity and ecosystem collapse made headlines, not for its dire warnings, but for its omissions. It's part of a larger trend of governments keeping climate security reports from the public.
“I suppose it is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail.” Thus wrote the famous psychologist Abraham Maslow in 1966.
Lenton, the founding director of the Global Systems Institute at the University of Exeter, was the lead author of the 2008 paper that formally introduced the idea of tipping points in the Earth’s climate system.

