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Clean Energy

Inside this issue

• Carbon trading has suffered since the Copenhagen summit

• The slow progress of US energy independence

• A look at how homeowners can help fight climate change - -

Content

Ready to save the world – but not yet

The Copenhagen accord was not strong enough to sway investment decisions, writes Ed Crooks

Market reaction: Carbon trading suffers after summit

Fiona Harvey finds pessimism and the recession have hurt emission dealings

R&D: Nuclear fusion may be worth the long wait

Clive Cookson looks at the progress made in the ‘Big Science’ billion-dollar research

Biofuels: Slow burn for US crop ambitions

Hal Weitzman on the rocky road to energy independence

Guest column: US and China must take the lead in ‘clean’ coal revolution

Nations should now take unilateral or bilateral action, writes Ming Sung

Individual action: Power lies with the people as leaders flounder

Carola Hoyos on cheap ways of making a big contribution

Pollution: Carbon capture crucial for future of coal-fired power

Financial pressures are forcing fossil fuel generators to evolve, says Fiona Harvey

Nuclear power: Wonder of new technology may be a dangerous diversion

Experts are wary of pipedreams, says Ed Crooks

Case study: UAE pursues its nuclear option

Robin Wigglesworth on plans for atomic energy to meet electricity demand