Editorial  
Everyone agrees that carbon dioxide is the largest contributor to global warming. High crbonemitting nations - the USA and China - are the chief targets of blame. But they have always been blamed collectively. No one so far has tried to make a case for individuals as the real villains. In fact, no one tried to find a method to calculate individual emissions.

India has demanded that the west pay developing countries £120 billion a year in exchange for their help in reducing greenhouse gas emissions. In a proposal that appears to have astonished Western officials, New Delhi suggested that the price of co-operation would be for industrialised countries to pay at least 0.5 per cent of their GDP to help developing nations invest in clearner renewable sources of energy and reduce their carbon emissions.

For solution, have this example. The tiny South Pacific island nation of Tuvalu could become the first zero-carbon country after vowing to abandon fossil fuels and generate all of its energy from renewable sources by 2020. At threat from rising sea levels caused by global warming, the low-lying nation plans to swap imported “dirty fuel” for wind and solar power. The island chain is low-lying. Worsening flooding in recent years has reminded the administration that tuvalu faces becoming uninhabitable if predictions of a large sea level rise this century come true.

Charity begins at home the month of charity is fast approaching and we hope and pray for your kind help in our mission of converting street children to school children.