Professor Richard J. Payne recipient of the Liversidge Lecture 2020, discusses how the use of naturalproducts will continue to provide inspiration for the development of drugs to treat human disease. ... Over the past decade, enormous advances in
By 2030 supply of natural resources will not meet demand. What can we do? ... South Wales government partners, Department of Planning and Industry, the Natural Resources Commission, the data analytics centre of New South Wales.
So, since 2013, we have been adding more renewables each year than coal, natural gas and oil combined. ... Here, you can see some pictures of manufacturing, of installation, of the product itself.
Or that heatwaves cause more deaths than all other natural disasters combined? ... of the world, particularly more vulnerable parts of the world such as lower middle income countries where a lot of the products that we consume here in Australia are made.
Because I think we can sometimes, in Australia, and in other places, think that policies are natural, you know, natural events, phenomenon, that kind of are handed down.
Phil Hirsch. Emeritus Professor of Human Geography, University of Sydney. Prof Hirsch specialises in natural resource management, rural change and the politics of environment in Southeast Asia. ... As part of her PhD, she was the first researcher to
doing some work in Birdlife Australia on getting these products removed from public sale, in line with what's happening elsewhere in the world. ... So these things are completely just an urban anomaly. They certainly aren't something that's occurring in
James Bradley’s latest book, Deep Water, joins new scholarship that reckons with humanity’s complex relationship to the natural world. ... And well, the corals are dead, or other animals are dead, and that's not, that's natural.