Меѓувреме правени се студии за нови 4 термоелектрани на јаглен
ПЕПЕЛТА ОД РЕК Е НА ГРАНИЦА ДА СТАНЕ ДЕПОНИЈА НА РАДИОАКТИВЕН ОТПАД
Депонијата со пепел во РЕК „Битола“ е на границата да стане депонија на радиоактивен отпад. Пепелта која настанува со согорување на лигнитот и се депонира на отворено има зголемана радиоактивност.
Еве еден напис за тоа како се уништува човековот здравје и природата во Нигерија. Еден од најголемите производители на гас ја има уништено животната средина со сеча на дрвја и високо загадување од цврсти горива. Од 170 милиони, 120 милиони лица се греат на црвсти горива. И според СЗО и според официјалните нигериски лица, гасот е единствено решение за заштита на човековата околина.
http://news.trust.org//item/20140530183509-63ekq/
Nigeria is a leading producer of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG), and has the world’s seventh largest reserves of natural gas. Yet the West African country is also among the biggest users of solid fuel for cooking.
According to the International Energy Agency, over 120 million Nigerians rely on firewood and charcoal for their cooking needs.
Wood, a form of biomass, remains the sole source of energy for hundreds of millions of Africans, who lack access to modern sources of power.
“The local and global environment is being degraded, as the
demand for biomass encourages deforestation … and, to the extent that it is used unsustainably,
burning biomass contributes to global warming,” said Paddy Ezeala of the Nigerian Conservation Foundation. It also creates local and regional air pollution, including smog, he added.
he World Health Organisation (
WHO) says indoor smoke from solid fuel is one of the leading causes of avoidable deaths and ill-health worldwide. Women are most affected because they often cook for their families and spend a lot of time in smoky kitchens.
In a 2013 report, the WHO said
98,000 Nigerian women die each year from the use of firewood, with thousands more at risk of serious health problems. “
After malaria and HIV/AIDS, smoke is the biggest killer of mostly women and children. This has cost poor families and institutions money that could be put to better use on education, health and nutrition,’’ the report said.
The government has also tried to replace fuel wood with kerosene, cooking gas and electricity through its National Energy Policy. Despite this,
Nigeria ranks among the lowest LPG-consuming states in Africa. It uses less than 0.5 kilogrammes (kg) per capita, compared with 1.9kg in Cameroon, 3kg per capita in Ghana, 5.5kg in South Africa and 44.4kg in Morocco.
According to the
Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves, it has been estimated that
the carbon impact of LPG is substantially less than that of other forms of solid biomass burned in a stove, and produces fewer harmful emissions than other fossil fuels, including kerosene.
“We have to adopt policies that will make gas affordable. If this is done, fuel wood will become more expensive, and if we protect the forests