Friday, 2 May 2014

Save The Green Land we Losing the worlds Most Beautiful Land

we are going to end of the world. what we are using are helping us to lead to the End Of the Earth. proof is here in below Image you can see that by various year green land is melting down. and one day will come when greenland will be disappear.
you can see in the above image, greenland in 1992  some of part of the greenland is melting.
but in the 2002 global warming is rised and 25 % greenland ice is melted. and in the 2005 more than 35 of green land ice is melted.
melting greenland
As per the united nation Environment program the On average, air temperatures here are one degree C higher than in the 1970s rising by 0.06 degrees C per year .
 The decade as a whole (2000–2009) was the nation's warmest on record In the climate changes of the temperature in the world is you can see here.

Global Analysis

you can see here the Rising temperature of the world. and this goes effect to the green land.
3d view of the greenland ice Melting by National geographic.
green land ice Melt

You can see here that green land position in the ice melting in the 2005 in comapre of the 1992.
most of the area of the green land is melting down. 
3d view of the Green Land comparison with GreenLand In 1992  and GreenLand in 2005.
As i told you in my Another post what is prime Minister of the GreenLand tells about the Global warming in greenLand Read Here..


Thursday, 1 May 2014

Greenland's Prime Minister perspective with Global Warming

Each country have to learn from Green Land. a country's most of part is Icey.

Global warming Report

Sofus Frederiksen lives in a small river valley above a sheltered stretch of Greenlandic fjord, where in the winter slabs of floating ice fuse into a pale blue sheet. Frederiksen, a 49-year-old farmer of Danish and Inuit descent, built his house himself, and his 10 horses, 95 cows, and about 500 sheep make his farm one of the most productive businesses in the small town of Narsaq. From his kitchen, where pictures of his grandchildren cover the refrigerator, a window frames a 2,300-foot mountain, a steep slope of black rock and white snow. There, an Australian company called Greenland Minerals & Energy (GDLNF) hopes to build an open-pit mine, extracting uranium and what it says is one of the largest deposits of rare earth metals in the world. Like many in Greenland, the Frederiksen family thinks . “We know that we have to move, and we have accepted it,” says Frederiksen’s wife, Suka. “We are only two people here against hundreds of jobs working in the mine. We tell ourselves that we have to give something for the Greenlandic people.”
List of Country wise which is producing the carbon dioxide.

Countries by carbon dioxide emissions

The mountain is a reminder of the choices Greenland faces as its government scrambles to energize an economy heavily dependent on Denmark, the country that colonized it in the early 1700s. Narsaq also happens to be the birthplace of the country’s prime minister, and she is a strident supporter of mining. A native Greenlander with a broad face, bright eyes, and a smile that breaks like sunlight, Aleqa Hammond, 48, is the first woman to occupy the island’s highest office. Elected just over a year ago, she came to power on promises to mine the country and put it on the path to independence. “We have mountains with uranium content,” she says. “We have mountains with gold. We have mountains with iron. We have mountains with zinc and lead. We have mountains with diamonds. We have mountains that are there for us to use and bring prosperity to our people.”

Greenland is one of the few countries cheering

global warming

, or at least openly making the most of it. The melting of its ice cap, which covers 80 percent of the island, is a major contributor to a rise in global sea levels. By the end of the century, these levels may climb as much as 2 meters—enough to drown island nations such as Kiribati and the Maldives and flood coastal cities around the world. The Arctic, where a few degrees of temperature can mean the difference between frozen and flowing, is one of the areas where the impacts of global greenhouse gas emissions are most evident. Traditional Inuit hunters are finding it increasingly difficult to carry out their trade. The whale migration has shifted. The ice on which they ride their dog sleds is often thin or absent. Storms and waves once held back by slabs of ice are eroding the coastline, pulling houses into the sea.

Ukraine reintroduces military conscription

Government forces 'move on Sloviansk'


Ukraine is bringing back military conscription with immediate effect to deal with a spreading pro-Moscow insurgency in its east.

Interim president, Oleksandr Turchynov, has issued a decree to bolster Ukraine's defence capabilities.


He says Western-backed authorities in Kiev are "powerless" to stop pro-Russian separatists in the east from taking over public buildings.

Ukrainian government forces are reported to have launched an operation in the city of Sloviansk.

The city is a stronghold for pro-Russian separatists who are exerting increasing control in eastern Ukraine.


Ukraine reintroduces military | http://newsworls.blogspot.in/

News agencies report gunfire, explosions and a military helicopter firing on the outskirts of the city.

But the BBC's Sarah Rainsford has spoken to separatists at checkpoints near the city who say there is no fighting in their sectors.

Russian television channels are saying that the city is being "stormed".

Earlier, Ukraine's acting President Olexander Turchynov reinstated military conscription to deal with deteriorating security in the east of the country.

Ukraine's interim prime minister said on Thursday his country was entering its "most dangerous 10 days" since independence in 1991 and was struggling to counter pro-Russian separatists on the verge of taking over the industrialized eastern heartland.

Arseniy Yatseniuk, in an interview with the Financial Times, accused Moscow of plotting to foment more clashes during the May Day holidays when nostalgia for Soviet victories and achievements tends to peak.

Pro-Russians strengthened their grip on the east of Ukraine on Thursday, storming the regional prosecutor's office in the town of Donetsk driving the police out and ransacking the building. The Kiev authorities fear the secessionists will put on a bigger show of strength on May 9, the commemoration of the Soviet Union's victory over Nazi Germany.

The move, announced in a decree, came as pro-Russia militants seized the regional prosecutor's office in the city of Donetsk, an industrial hub where a number of government offices have been seized in recent weeks.

Eastern Ukraine has a large Russian-speaking population and was a stronghold for President Viktor Yanukovych before he was overthrown by pro-Western protesters in February.
The crisis has plunged East-West relations to their lowest point since the Cold War.

On Thursday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel asked Russia in a phone call to President Vladimir Putin to help free foreign monitors held in eastern Ukraine.

The military observers were seized by pro-Russia separatists at a checkpoint in the flashpoint town of Sloviansk last Friday.

For his part, Mr Putin reiterated his call for Kiev to withdraw troops from the south-east to open the way for a national dialogue.

Mrs Merkel is due to meet US President Barack Obama in Washington on Friday to discuss the crisis in Ukraine