The Big Climate Change Debate - How to play your part pack
The pack includes a set of activities including “top trumps” cards, role-play cards and climate change research opportunities to engage pupils in the climate change debate and the COP15 process. These can form the basis of full lessons or can be used as shorter activities in the context of other curriculum areas.
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Food
The impact of food on climate change comes from the energy in processing, transporting and preparing it and the greenhouses gases given off by animals. The choices made by food technologists make a big difference to this impact. More...
What makes up a Carbon Footprint?
This is perhaps the most obvious contribution to our carbon footprint. When fossil fuels are burnt they produce CO2 which has been locked away for millions of years is released. It is the rapid increase in our fossil fuel use that has caused global warming.More....
Biofuels
There is simply not enough agricultural land in the world to replace fossil fuels with biofuels. We will need to use them efficiently, as well as using other sources of power.
Bio fuels for transport
Bio fuel for Transport

The diesel engine was originally designed to work with vegetable oil. Diesel cars today are optimized to work with ‘dino’-diesel, which is derived from oil. Diesel is less viscous than vegetable oil so cars have to be modified to cope with this. Typical modifications include heavier duty fuel injectors, upgraded fuel pumps and pre-heaters for the vegetable oil to make it flow better.
No processing other than extracting the vegetable oil is required so this helps keeps the cost of the fuel low. Recycled cooking oil can be filtered and used as fuel.
Bio-Diesel
Bio-diesel is vegetable oil that been processed to make it less viscous. It can be used in diesel engines without them having to be modified. However bio-diesel is corrosive to the materials used in the fuel systems of some cars, so it is always worth checking to see if your vehicle is suitable first.
Bio-diesel can be used safely in all diesel cars when blended with dino-diesel, this has the advantage that governments can make a percentage of all diesel sold bio-diesel a rather than relying on a percentage of the public choosing to use bio-diesel.
Bio-Ethanol
Ethanol is the chemical name for alcohol. Bio-ethanol can be produced from a huge variety of organic matter: sugar beat, grain crops or waste wood from saw mills. Most cars in Brazil already run on ethanol made from sugar cane. The engine in a bio-ethanol car works the same as a petrol engine, but it has to be made stronger than a petrol car engine because there is more energy per litre in bio-ethanol. All petrol sold in France is 5% bio-ethanol.