Global Warming Images
 

 
20120127_IMG_8376.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows the generator.
 
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20120127_IMG_8491.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows a plant technician carrying a gas detector to warn of gas leaks.
 
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20120127_IMG_8494.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows a plant technician carrying a gas detector to warn of gas leaks.
 
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20120127_IMG_8497.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows a plant technician carrying a gas detector to warn of gas leaks.
 
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20120127_IMG_8503.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows a plant technician carrying a gas detector to warn of gas leaks.
 
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20120127_IMG_8507.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows a plant technician carrying a gas detector to warn of gas leaks.
 
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20120127_IMG_8509.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows a plant technician carrying a gas detector to warn of gas leaks.
 
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20120127_IMG_8510.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows a plant technician carrying a gas detector to warn of gas leaks.
 
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20120127_IMG_8673.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on th land. This shot shows the hopper being loaded with maize.
 
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20120127_IMG_8676.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on th land. This shot shows the hopper being loaded with maize.
 
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20120127_IMG_8678.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on th land. This shot shows the hopper being loaded with maize.
 
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20120127_IMG_8680.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on th land. This shot shows the hopper being loaded with maize.
 
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20120127_IMG_8686.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on th land. This shot shows the hopper being loaded with maize.
 
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20091016_IMG_6030.jpg A climber on Dow Crag at sunset,  Lake District, UK.
 
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20120116_IMG_4875.jpg Sunrise over Lake Windermere from Todd Crag above Ambleside, Lake District, UK.
 
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20120116_IMG_4876.jpg Sunrise over Lake Windermere from Todd Crag above Ambleside, Lake District, UK.
 
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20120116_IMG_4890.jpg A man jumping for joy at sunrise over Lake Windermere from Todd Crag above Ambleside, Lake District, UK.
 
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20120116_IMG_4907.jpg A man jumping for joy at sunrise over Lake Windermere from Todd Crag above Ambleside, Lake District, UK.
 
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20120116_IMG_4908.jpg A man jumping for joy at sunrise over Lake Windermere from Todd Crag above Ambleside, Lake District, UK.
 
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20120116_IMG_4911.jpg A man jumping for joy at sunrise over Lake Windermere from Todd Crag above Ambleside, Lake District, UK.
 
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20120112_IMG_7494.jpg A protest sign about a new wind turbine in Seaton near workington, Cumbria, UK, with onshore wind turbines and the offshore Robin Rigg wind farm visible.
 
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IMG_6106_PPE.jpg Gathega Dam supplying the water to power Guthega power station as part of the Snowy mountains hydro scheme, New South Wales, Australia.
 
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IMG_2861_man.jpg Flaring off gas at the Flotta oil terminal on the Island of Flotta in the Orkney's Scotland, UK. 10% of the UK's oil production comes through the Flotta terminal from the North Sea oil fields.
 
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IMG_2745_hard hat.jpg An Enercon 2.3 MW wind turbine on Flotta in the Orkney isles, Scotland, UK. The enercon turbine is a gearless, direct drive mechanism, used in combination with an annular generator.
 
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12630024_red.jpg A candle used to spell the word Hot
 
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254_stop.jpg Emmissions from a chemical plant in Whitehaven, Cumbria, UK
 
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IMG_4723_stop.jpg Emissions from the Bluescope steel works at Port Kembla, Wollongong, Australia.
 
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IMG_4743_stop.jpg Emissions from the Bluescope steel works at Port Kembla, Wollongong, Australia.
 
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IMG_7513_stop.jpg The RAF, REd Arrows flying over the Lake District during the Windermere Air Show, UK.
 
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IMG_0622_shades.jpg The Krakken, a jack up barge, that is constructing the wind turbines of the Walney offshore wind farm, uses a specialist cradle to lift a turbine blade into place. The farm consists of 102, 3.6 MW turbines, giving a total capacity of the Walney project of 367.2 MW, enough to power 320,000 homes. The rotor diameter of the turbines is 107m for Walney 1 and 120 m for Walney 2. The wind farm is owned and constructed by Dong Energy. Cumbria, UK.
 
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IMG_1913_foreman.jpg The Krakken, a jack up barge, that is constructing the wind turbines of the Walney offshore wind farm. The farm consists of 102, 3.6 MW turbines, giving a total capacity of the Walney project of 367.2 MW, enough to power 320,000 homes. The rotor diameter of the turbines is 107m for Walney 1 and 120 m for Walney 2. The wind farm is owned and constructed by Dong Energy. Cumbria, UK.
 
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IMG_8566_helmet.jpg The jack up barge, The Goliath lifting a transition pieces into place on the Walney Offshore windfarm project, off Barrow in Furness, Cumbria, UK. When finished it will have 102, 3.6 MW turbines, giving a total capacity of the Walney project of 367.2 MW, enough to power 320,000 homes. The rotor diameter of the turbines is 107m for Walney 1 and 120 m for Walney 2. The wind farm is owned and constructed by Dong Energy.
 
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