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Search Result for “coal-fired generation”

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LIFE

Seizing energy

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 29/06/2016

» 'What if we can capture the sun and put it in a box?" Park Jaeyoung, an astrophysicist who once worked at the nuclear research centre Los Alamos National Laboratory in the US, told students and guests at Khon Kaen University, his eyes reflecting his enthusiasm as passion lit up the room.

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LIFE

Unconventional conservationist

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 02/03/2016

» By look and temperament, Sasiprapa Raisanguan, a 22-year-old staff member at the Centre for Protection & Revival of Local Community Rights (CPCR), doesn't fit the stereotype of a Thai conservationist. She is no starry-eyed tree-hugger clad in natural-dye cotton, nor does she have a hemp rucksack or ride a bicycle to reduce her carbon footprint. At our interview in Chiang Mai, Sasiprapa arrives on her motorcycle, which she calls "a practical choice" to getting around the northern city where her office is.

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LIFE

Sustaining environmental activism

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 21/10/2015

» The demography of environmental activists in Thailand has shifted. The pioneering generation, those inspired by the life and death of the late Sueb Nakhasathien, the forest official who committed suicide in what is believed to be a protest against bureaucratic hopelessness, have started retiring, or feel too tired and have moved into other fields.

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LIFE

Whale watch

Life, Pichaya Svasti, Published on 14/08/2015

» Campaigners and government agencies are determined to add the mesmerising Bryde's whale to the conserved species list

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LIFE

An endangered craft

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 27/05/2015

» Ban Khlong Rua, a Muslim village in Krabi province, might be just another small fishing village on the Andaman Sea. But for southerners living along this side of the coast, the name represents the hub of Andaman fishing boatbuilding.

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LIFE

A Legacy lives on

Life, Karnjana Karnjanatawe, Published on 23/06/2014

» Death has helped Korn-uma Pongnoi learn and grow. Since her husband, Charoen Wat-aksorn, was gunned down on the night of June 21, 2004 at Bo Nok intersection, the 45-year-old has found inner strength to carry on the mission they started together two decades ago: to protect their community and its natural resources.