Global Warming Images
 

 
20120415_T5616x3744-114.jpg An internal courtyard of a traditional Riad hotel in Marrakech, Morocco, North Africa.
 
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20060601_366W2115.jpg A house at night with a moon in Ambleside UK
 
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20120302_IMG_1745.jpg A green house that was built in the 1970's but still exceeds green build regulation today, at Feshiebridge, Cairngorm, Scotland, UK, with triple glazed windows.
 
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20120302_IMG_1749.jpg A green house that was built in the 1970's but still exceeds green build regulation today, at Feshiebridge, Cairngorm, Scotland, UK, with triple glazed windows.
 
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20120127_IMG_8345.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 control panels in the generator room.
 
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20120127_IMG_8346.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 control panels in the generator room.
 
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20120127_IMG_8348.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 control panels in the generator room.
 
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20120127_IMG_8350.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 control panels in the generator room.
 
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20120127_IMG_8351.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 control panels in the generator room.
 
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20120127_IMG_8355.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 control panels in the generator room.
 
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IMG_5864_room.jpg Gentoo house builder's Hutton Rise housing development in Sunderland, UK. Hutton Roof sets new standards in green build. Many of the houses are zero carbon, highly thermally efficient and incur minimal running costs. These passivehaus;s have 300mm wall cavities with super insulation standards. One biofuel boiler will heat 8 houses which are so thermally efficient that the only source of heat in thw whole house , is a towel rail in the bathroom. The annual running cost for heat, light and water will be only £70 per house. The houses are 20 times more air tight than the current British standard. All of the houses have solar thermal water heating and many have solar electric panels.
 
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IMG_6761_living room.jpg Riverside One is a new concept in greenbuild. It adheres to the ten principles of One Planet living, Built by BioRegional Quintain in Middlesbrough, Teeside, UK. It is an exceptinal green building, whose individual housing units will have a low carbon footprint. The whole block is heated by a biofuel boiler. During construction it used recycled oil rig pipes for piling, the concrete was mixed with recycled agregate, super insulated with earth wool, it uses grey recycled water to save water, locally sourced timber, the electricity for the building is sourced from renewable sources and the buidling incorporates Swift bird boxs and bat boxs. Residents are encouraged to car share and use local organic vegetable box schemes.
 
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IMG_1169_boiler room.jpg The boiler at Queens Mill in Burnley. The mill is powered by a steam engine, built over 100 years ago and is still powering the mill today. The mill is believed to be the only steam powered weaving mill working in the world. The weaving shed at Queens mill was used as a location for filming the Kings speech. At one time the Lancashire cotton industry, clothed the world. The steam powered industry, fuelled by coal, was the start of large scale carbon emissions, which set us on the road to anthropomorphic climate change. In its hey day, the boiler was consumming 6 tons of coal a day.
 
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IMG_0950_menu board.jpg Cote How, one of only 3 Soil Association, registered organic guest houses in the UK. Cote Howe is in Rydal, Lake District, Cumbria, UK.This shot shows the tea room menu.
 
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IMG_0953_menu.jpg Cote How, one of only 3 Soil Association, registered organic guest houses in the UK. Cote Howe is in Rydal, Lake District, Cumbria, UK.This shot shows the tea room menu.
 
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IMG_6768_p.jpg The control room hall of Krafla geothermal power station, that measures some of the 5000 measurements that control the power plant.. Krafla has an installed capacity of 60 MW. 100% of Iceland's electricity is produced from renewables, 70% from hydro and 30% from geothermal.
 
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IMG_6771 (1)_p.jpg The control room hall of Krafla geothermal power station, that measures some of the 5000 measurements that control the power plant.. Krafla has an installed capacity of 60 MW. 100% of Iceland's electricity is produced from renewables, 70% from hydro and 30% from geothermal.
 
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IMG_6773 (1)_p.jpg The control room hall of Krafla geothermal power station, that measures some of the 5000 measurements that control the power plant.. Krafla has an installed capacity of 60 MW. 100% of Iceland's electricity is produced from renewables, 70% from hydro and 30% from geothermal.
 
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IMG_6774_p.jpg The control room hall of Krafla geothermal power station, that measures some of the 5000 measurements that control the power plant.. Krafla has an installed capacity of 60 MW. 100% of Iceland's electricity is produced from renewables, 70% from hydro and 30% from geothermal.
 
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IMG_7903_p.jpg The control room of Krafla geothermal power station, that measures some of the 5000 measurements that control the power plant. Krafla has an installed capacity of 60 MW. 100% of Iceland's electricity is produced from renewables, 70% from hydro and 30% from geothermal.
 
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IMG_7904_p.jpg The control room of Krafla geothermal power station, that measures some of the 5000 measurements that control the power plant. Krafla has an installed capacity of 60 MW. 100% of Iceland's electricity is produced from renewables, 70% from hydro and 30% from geothermal.
 
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IMG_7909_p.jpg The control room of Krafla geothermal power station, that measures some of the 5000 measurements that control the power plant. Krafla has an installed capacity of 60 MW. 100% of Iceland's electricity is produced from renewables, 70% from hydro and 30% from geothermal.
 
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IMG_7912_p.jpg Krafla geothermal power station. Krafla has an installed capacity of 60 MW. 100% of Iceland's electricity is produced from renewables, 70% from hydro and 30% from geothermal.
 
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IMG_8206_skipper.jpg The captain of the Jack up barge, the Goliath controling the ship, in the control room.
 
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IMG_7592_store.jpg A store room with working at height gear on the jack uop barge, The Kraken, which is installing the Walney offshore wind farm, Cumbria, UK.
 
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IMG_7602_hook.jpg A store room with working at height gear on the jack uop barge, The Kraken, which is installing the Walney offshore wind farm, Cumbria, UK.
 
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IMG_4884_holiday.jpg A holiday village at Skala Eresou on Lesbos, Greece.
 
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IMG_4885_holiday.jpg A holiday village at Skala Eresou on Lesbos, Greece.
 
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IMG_4738_room.jpg Old Cave houses in Guadix, Andalucia, Spain. Up to 10,000 people still lie in cool underground houses dug out of the rock, this area known as the Barrio Santiago is a mix of modern cave houses and ancient old abandoned dwellings. These houses are a good example of low carbon living.
 
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IMG_2033_indoor pool.jpg An indoor swimming pool at the HPB property of Bell End Farm in Rosedale, North York Moors.
 
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IMG_2036_swimming pool.jpg An indoor swimming pool at the HPB property of Bell End Farm in Rosedale, North York Moors.
 
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IMG_2042_pool.jpg An indoor swimming pool at the HPB property of Bell End Farm in Rosedale, North York Moors.
 
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