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David Evans
@dave161256
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@PeterStefanovi2 Dont forget that banks also receive interest from the Bank of England on the reserves they hold. The interest rate paid to banks is the Bank of England's base rate. So, when the interest rate went up the banks were raking it in.
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@BLAIMGame @simonmaginn You mean that you believe the propaganda used to smear a politician who has campaigned against all forms of racism for decades.
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@Ed_Miliband Where are you planning to get all the extra fresh water from that your new nuclear reactors will require? Are you volunteering your constituency to be the site for long-term storage of nuclear waste?
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@nozzerinho @SiOldridge The impact of renewable energy on nature is tiny compared with the devastation caused by the climate change that would result from the continued burning of FFs at today's rate.
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@SacktheJudge @SiOldridge What happens to the amount of gas a home burns for heating if the insulation is improved? How would that affect CO2 emissions?
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@JohnSmi26267745 @johnmcdonnellMP 1. CO2 is now at more than 420ppm which is 0.042%. this means that every 1cm3 of air contains 10,000,000,000,000,000 CO2 molecules. 2. In the last 200 years human activity has increased CO2 from 280ppm to 420ppm. An increase of 50%.
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@WStand13 @johnmcdonnellMP Where is their peer-reviewed published scientific research detailing their research methods, all the data they have collected and an explanation of their conclusions?
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@SiOldridge @toadmeister @TiceRichard @DavidGHFrost @danielmgmoylan @4kiwi I would be glad if the government was investing £328 billion pounds in the transition to net-zero. It would create thousands of new jobs and government owned renewable energy infrastructure would lower energy bills for everybody while setting an example to the rest of the world.
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@DdraigY60347 @Jane61773534728 @g__j @BBCr4today Humididty comes from the evaporation of water where the higher the temperature the faster it evaporates. Water at any temperature evaporates. The higher the temperature the faster it happens.
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@DdraigY60347 @Jane61773534728 @g__j @BBCr4today The answer you were looking for is for every degree that temperature rises, the amount of water vapour in the atmosphere can increase by about 7%. Next question: If the warmer atmosphere holds more water vapour what effect will that have on the intensity of rainfall?
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@MarkCor80226138 @Calum92Stevens @tessakhan Given the huge amount of scientific evidence that has been accumulated over the last 150 years of research if you are still sceptical then you must be scientifically illiterate.
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@shoshmck @sarah_go_green If you want to see data on heat pumps installed in homes have a look at
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@PullNews @MarkWil52807604 @WMO @CopernicusECMWF @TonyClimate I think that you are the one that is deluded.
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