Would you like more control over your energy consumption, demonstrate environmental responsibility and improve your bottom line? Call Gaia: 024 7623 6446.
Gaia is a remotely managed energy monitoring system supporting businesses 24/7 to reduce wastage and cut carbon emissions. The Gaia system emulates the role of an energy manager constantly observing energy consumption and supporting businesses to engage employees in energy efficiency behaviours.
24/7 Monitoring: Gaia constantly watches energy consumption (Electricity & Gas) direct from your meter.
Under Control: Gaia alerts you only when consumption exceeds normal usage, so you can concentrate on running your business with peace of mind that energy usage is under control.
Environmental Improvement: Gaia provides annual energy packs stuffed with top tips and support material, designed to engage staff, drive down energy costs and recognise your environmental undertaking.
Save Money: The Gaia energy monitoring system can help you save up to 20% off your energy bills.
Call Gaia on 024 7623 6446
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A group of islands with the potential to develop into a tourist paradise has been named as the country least equipped to withstand the effects of climate change. The Comoros Islands in the Indian Ocean, between Mozambique and Madagascar, are a small ...
Soaring world food prices look set to force Gordon Brown into a U-turn over the use of crops such as corn, rapeseed, palm and soya to produce fuel as an alternative to petrol and diesel.
As she put the finishing touch to a watercolour outside the gated community of Oyster Harbours, Nancy Walton wrinkled her nose at the thought of America's first offshore wind farm popping up on the horizon of Nantucket Sound. "I believe in wind power," she said, "but these will be higher than the Statue of Liberty. There are so precious few places on earth as unspoilt as this. Why can't they just put them somewhere else?"
A new pathway for methane production has been uncovered in the oceans, and this has a significant potential impact for the study of greenhouse gas production on our planet. The article reveals that aerobic decomposition of an organic, phosphorus-containing compound, methylphosphonate, may be responsible for the supersaturation of methane in ocean surface waters.
Buildings in Wales could be expected to include renewable and low-carbon energy under proposed planning policies to tackle climate change launched yesterday.
Planning experts have called on the government to shift its eco-town policy to eco-quarter schemes encompassing urban expansion projects and redevelopment.
British Waterways should not be expected to bear most of the financial risk for the restoration of canals, according to a Commons environment, food and rural affairs select committee report.
Brighton and Hove City Council has drawn up advisory guidelines for sustainable building design across the city covering energy, water and sustainable materials. The guidelines will come into effect from 1 August.
The Conservatives will scrap the infrastructure planning commission (IPC) if they win the next general election, shadow planning minister Jacqui Lait has promised.
The London Assembly has welcomed progress towards making the 2012 Olympic Games eco-friendly but criticised efforts to set ambitious environmental targets.
An environmental coalition has called on the government to set local and regional renewable energy targets and earmark areas across the UK for green development.
A device consisting of a giant rubber tube may hold the key to producing affordable electricity from the energy in sea waves. Named after the snake of the same name because of its long thin shape, the Anaconda is closed at both ends and filled completely with water. It is designed to be anchored just below the sea's surface, with one end facing the oncoming waves.
ScienceDaily: It's not just about climate change anymore. Besides loading the atmosphere with heat-trapping greenhouse gases, human emissions of carbon dioxide have also begun to alter the chemistry of the ocean--often called the cradle of life on Earth. The ecological and economic consequences are difficult to predict but possibly calamitous, warn a team of chemical oceanographers in the July 4 issue of Science, and halting the changes already underway will likely require even steeper cuts in ...
Carbon sequestration, although "not a silver bullet", is an essential bridging technology that needs to be deployed fast if Europe and the rest of the world are serious about tackling climate change, argues Paal Frisvold, head of the Brussels office of the Bellona Foundation, a Norwegian environmental NGO.
Carbon sequestration and storage, although "not a silver bullet", is an essential bridging technology that needs to be deployed fast if Europe and the rest of the world are serious about tackling climate change, argues Paal Frisvold, head of the Brussels office of the Bellona Foundation, a Norwegian environmental NGO.
EU environment ministers will today (3 July)beurged to acceleratethe development of carbon capture and storage (CCS) demonstration plants duringa two-day informal Council meeting of EU energy and environment ministers, the first of its kind under the French EU Presidency.
The government is expected to axe plans for a 2p rise in fuel duty after Downing Street today confirmed that an announcement would be made on the issue 'within the next few weeks'
Kjartan Sveinsson, who plays guitars and keyboards, talks about why it is important to preserve Iceland's natural beauty and the difficulty in staying green while touring
Ever since the 1750s, when the writer, satirist, statesman and inventor Benjamin Franklin put political cartooning on the map by publishing the first cartoon of the genre in America, artists have combined their talent, wit and political beliefs to create cartoons that enrage, enlighten or simply engage the viewer.
When Boris Johnson was elected Mayor of London, I was devastated. Politically, Boris and his chums don't stand for the same things I do, and while Ken could prove to be a bit of an unknown quantity, I admired his principles and his ability to get things done.
There is an area of countryside six miles south-west of Stratford-upon-Avon that is particularly picturesque. It boasts elegant views of the Cotswolds, and fine country lanes that meander around green pastures. Stand still long enough and you can almost hear the sound of "Jerusalem". It could not be more English.
Prince Charles called the old visitors' centre on the peak of Snowdon 'the highest slum in Wales' - and now its eco-friendly replacement is proving just as controversial. Jill Tunstall reports