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  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-322.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-293.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-289.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-264.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-162.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-151.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, meeting with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-066.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-010.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011..Photo © J.B. Russell
    C.Lagarde110125-008.jpg
  • Manintenance personnel take a break with Ronald McDonald on Nanjing Xilu, Shanghai's luxury shopping street. China's booming economy is bringing wealth to many and improving living standards, but soaring demand for energy is having serious effects on the environment. 75% of China's energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy, and seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China..Shanghai, China. 18/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-050.jpg
  • Nanjing Zilu, Shanghai's luxury shopping street. As China's economy continues to boom, more and more chinese are obtaining the modern, energy consuming amenities that wealth and improved living standards bring. China's soaring demand for energy is having serious effects on the environment. 75% of China's energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. Seven of the world's 10 most polluted cities are in China...Shanghai, China. 18/11/2005..Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-046.jpg
  • Luxury apartment buildings sprouting in the new Pudong financial district of Shanghai. As China's economy continues to boom, more and more chinese are obtaining the modern energy consuming amenities that wealth and improved living standards bring. China's soaring demand for energy is having serious effects on the environment. 75% of China's energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy, and seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China...Shanghai, China. 19/11/2005..Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-043.jpg
  • Cars and bicycles fight for space in front of luxury department stores. China's booming economy is bringing wealth to many chinese, but energy needs are also soaring. Coal use, decaying industry and growing numbers of automobiles are having serious effects on the environment..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-041.jpg
  • A woman walks through coal miner's housing near a coal mine in a region known as the "sea of coal." Dàtóng has some of the worst air quality in China. Seven of the ten most polluted cities in the world are in China. 75% of China's energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China's booming economy is bringing wealth to many chinese, but soaring demand for energy is having serious effects on the environment..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-025.jpg
  • Coal miners at a small, private mine. 75% of China's growing energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries. Coal mining is the the country's most dangerous job. 6000 to 20,000 miners are killed every year in accidents. The demands of China's booming economy put production before safetly..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-011.jpg
  • Coal carriages being off-loaded at a small, private mine. 75% of China's growing energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries. Coal mining is the the country's most dangerous job. 6000 to 20,000 miners are killed every year in accidents. The demands of China's booming economy put production before safetly..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-010.jpg
  • Coal miners at a small, private mine. 75% of China's growing energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries. Coal mining is the the country's most dangerous job. 6000 to 20,000 miners are killed every year in accidents. The demands of China's booming economy put production before safetly..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-007.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-324.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-286.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-217.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-140.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-097.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, meeting with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-091.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-040.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-022.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011..Photo © J.B. Russell
    C.Lagarde110125-005.jpg
  • Nanjing Donglu, Shanghai's shopping street. China's booming economy is bringing wealth to many and improving living standards, but soaring demand for energy is having serious effects on the environment. 75% of China's energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy, and seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China..Shanghai, China. 18/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    China0511-051.jpg
  • Nanjing Donglu, Shanghai's shopping street. As China's economy continues to boom, more and more chinese are obtaining the modern, energy consuming amenities that wealth and improved living standards bring. China's soaring demand for energy is having serious effects on the environment. 75% of China's energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy, and seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China...Shanghai, China. 18/11/2005..Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-048.jpg
  • Nanjing Donglu, Shanghai's shopping street. As China's economy continues to boom, more and more chinese are obtaining the modern, energy consuming amenities that wealth and improved living standards bring. China's soaring demand for energy is having serious effects on the environment. 75% of China's energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy, and seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China...Shanghai, China. 18/11/2005..Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-045.jpg
  • Barges for transporting coal to Shanghai's power plants on the Guangpu river. 75% of China's energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China's booming economy is bringing wealth to many chinese, but soaring demand for energy is having serious effects on the environment..Shanghai China. 17/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-042.jpg
  • Artificial, plastic palm trees in a park near the Number One coal fired power plant. 75% of China's growing energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries. Coal mining is the the country's most dangerous job. 6000 to 20,000 miners are killed every year in accidents. The demands of China's booming economy put production before safetly..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-040.jpg
  • Coal carriages being off-loaded at a small, private mine. 75% of China's growing energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries. Coal mining is the the country's most dangerous job. 6000 to 20,000 miners are killed every year in accidents. The demands of China's booming economy put production before safetly..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-026.jpg
  • Coal miners extracting coal atop a giant mound of scree. Housing for miners sit at the foot of the talus slope. 75% of China's energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China's booming economy is bringing wealth to many chinese, but soaring demand for energy is having serious effects on the environment..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-024.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-226.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-219.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-121.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-102.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, meeting with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-076.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, meeting with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-063.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, meeting with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-060.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-031.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011..Photo © J.B. Russell
    C.Lagarde110125-009.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011..Photo © J.B. Russell
    C.Lagarde110125-001.jpg
  • Nanjing Xilu, Shanghai's luxury shopping street. As China's economy continues to boom, more and more chinese are obtaining the modern, energy consuming amenities that wealth and improved living standards bring. China's soaring demand for energy is having serious effects on the environment. 75% of China's energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy, and seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China...Shanghai, China. 18/11/2005..Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-047.jpg
  • Large screen advertising monitors reflected in a city bus on Nanjing Donglu, Shanghai's shopping street. As China's economy continues to boom, more and more chinese are obtaining the modern, energy consuming amenities that wealth and improved living standards bring. China's soaring demand for energy is having serious effects on the environment. 75% of China's energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy, and seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China...Shanghai, China. 19/11/2005..Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-044.jpg
  • A coal miner in housing for miners next to one of many mines in an area known as "the sea of coal." 75% of China's energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China's booming economy is bringing wealth to many chinese, but soaring demand for energy is having serious effects on the environment..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-032.jpg
  • Coal carriages being off-loaded at a small, private mine. 75% of China's growing energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries. Coal mining is the the country's most dangerous job. 6000 to 20,000 miners are killed every year in accidents. The demands of China's booming economy put production before safetly..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-009.jpg
  • The economy of the Iraqi Kurdistan runs on old Iraqi Dinars printed in Switzerland before the regime of Saddam Hussein. There is virtually no national reserve and no private banks. All the cash of the region is in the hands of the people. The money changers of the Bazaar are Iraqi Kurdistan's money markets. Most of the currencies exchanged are Dollars, Euros, Saddam's new Iraqi Dinars, Turkish lira and Iranian rials, the countries with which most trade and smuggling are conducted...Sulaimaniya, Iraqi Kurdistan. 24/11/2002...Photo © J.B. Russell
    kurd-078.jpg
  • The economy of the Iraqi Kurdistan runs on old Iraqi Dinars printed in Switzerland before the regime of Saddam Hussein. There is virtually no national reserve and no private banks. All the cash of the region is in the hands of the people. The money changers of the Bazaar are Iraqi Kurdistan's money markets. Most of the currencies exchanged are Dollars, Euros, Saddam's new Iraqi Dinars, Turkish lira and Iranian rials, the countries with which most trade and smuggling are conducted...Sulaimaniya, Iraqi Kurdistan. 24/11/2002...Photo © J.B. Russell
    kurd-081.jpg
  • The economy of the Iraqi Kurdistan runs on old Iraqi Dinars printed in Switzerland before the regime of Saddam Hussein. There is virtually no national reserve and no private banks. All the cash of the region is in the hands of the people. The money changers of the Bazaar are Iraqi Kurdistan's money markets. Most of the currencies exchanged are Dollars, Euros, Saddam's new Iraqi Dinars, Turkish lira and Iranian rials, the countries with which most trade and smuggling are conducted...Sulaimaniya, Iraqi Kurdistan. 24/11/2002...Photo © J.B. Russell
    kurd-080.jpg
  • The economy of the Iraqi Kurdistan runs on old Iraqi Dinars printed in Switzerland before the regime of Saddam Hussein. There is virtually no national reserve and no private banks. All the cash of the region is in the hands of the people. The money changers of the Bazaar are Iraqi Kurdistan's money markets. Most of the currencies exchanged are Dollars, Euros, Saddam's new Iraqi Dinars, Turkish lira and Iranian rials, the countries with which most trade and smuggling are conducted...Sulaimaniya, Iraqi Kurdistan. 24/11/2002...Photo © J.B. Russell
    kurd-083.jpg
  • The economy of the Iraqi Kurdistan runs on old Iraqi Dinars printed in Switzerland before the regime of Saddam Hussein. There is virtually no national reserve and no private banks. All the cash of the region is in the hands of the people. The money changers of the Bazaar are Iraqi Kurdistan's money markets. Most of the currencies exchanged are Dollars, Euros, Saddam's new Iraqi Dinars, Turkish lira and Iranian rials, the countries with which most trade and smuggling are conducted...Sulaimaniya, Iraqi Kurdistan. 24/11/2002...Photo © J.B. Russell
    kurd-079.jpg
  • A miner walks through a haze of coal dust at a regional coal mine. 75% of China's growing energy needs come from coal, the cheapest and most polluting form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 11/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-023.jpg
  • A worker at the state run Jinhuagong coal mine sorts coal outside the mine. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China due primarily to China's dilapidated heavy industries and its dependence on coal - the dirtiest form of energy. 75% of China's growing energy needs comes from coal. ..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 10/11/2005..Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-022.jpg
  • Miners at a regional coal mine sorting coal. 75% of China's growing energy needs come from coal, the cheapest and most polluting form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 11/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-013.jpg
  • Coal miners eating and drinking in between work shifts at the Jinhuagong mine. Mining is the country's most dangerous profession. Officially, more than 6000 miners, and as many as 20,000 by some estimates, are killed every year in accidents. 75% of China's growing energy needs comes from coal - a demand that puts production before safety. .Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 10/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-033.jpg
  • A miner at a locally run coal mine. 75% of China's growing energy needs come from coal, the cheapest and most polluting form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 11/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-012.jpg
  • Air pollution near the Number One coal fired power plant. 75% of China's growing energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-038.jpg
  • The Number One coal fired power station. 75% of China's growing energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-037.jpg
  • Large blocks of coal being transported from a mine by local sellers. Seven of the ten most polluted cities in the world are located in China, due primarily to the country's dependence on coal for energy and its dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, China. 09/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-027.jpg
  • A large pile of coal at a regional coal mine. 75% of China's growing energy needs come from coal, the cheapest and most polluting form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 11/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-021.jpg
  • Workers at the state run Jinhuagong coal mine sorts coal outside the mine. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China due primarily to China's dilapidated heavy industries and its dependence on coal - the dirtiest form of energy. 75% of China's growing energy needs comes from coal. .Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 10/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-018.jpg
  • A worker at the state run Jinhuagong coal mine sorts coal outside the mine. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China due primarily to China's dilapidated heavy industries and its dependence on coal - the dirtiest form of energy. 75% of China's growing energy needs comes from coal. .Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 10/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-017.jpg
  • Miners at the state run Jinhuagong coal mine prepare to descend into the mine. Over 6000 miners, and as many as 20,000 by some estimates, are killed every year in accidents. 75% of China's growing energy needs come from coal, a demand that puts production before safety..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 10/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-006.jpg
  • Miners at the state run Jinhuagong coal mine prepare to descend into the mine. Over 6000 miners, and as many as 20,000 by some estimates, are killed every year in accidents. 75% of China's growing energy needs come from coal, a demand that puts production before safety..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 10/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-005.jpg
  • Coal mines and miner's housing in the coal mining region around Dàtóng known as the "sea of coal." 75% of China's growing energy needs come from coal, the cheapest and most polluting form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 11/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-004.jpg
  • Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-315.jpg
  • Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-310.jpg
  • Business travellers at the Shanghai airport..Shanghai, China. 21/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    China0511-049.jpg
  • Residential apartments next to the Number One coal fired power plant. 75% of China's growing energy needs, including domestic heating and cooking, is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-039.jpg
  • Smoke stakes from coal powered energy and industry billowing smoke and climate changing gases. Seven of the ten most polluted cities in the world are located in China, due primarily to the country's dependence on coal for energy and its dilapidated heavy industries. China is the world's leading producer of coal..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 10/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-036.jpg
  • Coal miners drinking in between work shifts at the Jinhuagong mine. Mining is the country's most dangerous profession. Officially, more than 6000 miners, and as many as 20,000 by some estimates, are killed every year in accidents. 75% of China's growing energy needs comes from coal - a demand that puts production before safety. .Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 10/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-034.jpg
  • Housing for coal miners cover the hills surrounding the coal mining region known as the "sea of coal" near Dàtóng. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China and mining is the country's most dangerous profession. Officially, more than 6000 miners, and as many as 20,000 by some estimates, are killed every year in accidents. 75% of China's growing energy needs comes from coal - a demand that puts production before safety. .Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 10/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-031.jpg
  • Coal rounds used for household heating and cooking being delivered to a home. Seven of the ten most polluted cities in the world are located in China, due primarily to the country's dependence on coal for energy and dilapidated heavy industries..Beijing, China. 06/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-030.jpg
  • Donkey cart coal sellers in a city street. The sellers buy coal from the mines at 4 AM, transport the coal 20 kms to the city center to sell for domestic heating and cooking use. They earn about 100 RMB (10 ¤) per day. 75% of China's growing energy needs is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-029.jpg
  • Donkey cart coal seller in the city street. 75% of China's growing energy needs, including domestic heating and cooking, is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-028.jpg
  • Miners at a regional coal mine sorting coal. 75% of China's growing energy needs come from coal, the cheapest and most polluting form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 11/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-020.jpg
  • A worker at the state run Jinhuagong coal mine sorts coal outside the mine. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China due primarily to China's dilapidated heavy industries and its dependence on coal - the dirtiest form of energy. 75% of China's growing energy needs comes from coal. .Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 10/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-019.jpg
  • Miners at a regional coal mine sorting coal. 75% of China's growing energy needs come from coal, the cheapest and most polluting form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 11/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-016.jpg
  • A Miner runing the coal extraction conveyor at a regional coal mine. 75% of China's growing energy needs come from coal, the cheapest and most polluting form of energy. China is the world's largest coal producer. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 11/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-014.jpg
  • Coal miners at a small, private mine. 75% of China's growing energy needs, including domestic heating and cooking, is supplied by coal, the cheapest and dirtiest form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries. Coal mining is the country's most dangerous work. Some 6000 miners, and as many as 20,000 by some estimates, die every year in accidents. .Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 12/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-008.jpg
  • Pedestrians stroll along a boulevard shrouded in smog. Seven of the ten most polluted cities in the world are located in China, due primarily to the country's dependence on coal for energy and dilapidated heavy industries..Beijing, China. 05/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-003.jpg
  • A shroud of smog envelopes Tiananmen Square. Seven of the ten most polluted cities in the world are located in China, due primarily to the country's dependence on coal for energy and dilapidated heavy industries..Beijing, China. 05/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-002.jpg
  • Coal miners stroll along railroad tracks that transport coal from the mining region known as the "sea of coal" near Dàtóng. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China and mining is the country's most dangerous profession. Officially, more than 6000 miners, and as many as 20,000 by some estimates, are killed every year in accidents. 75% of China's growing energy needs comes from coal - a demand that puts production before safety. .Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 10/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-035.jpg
  • A miner at a locally run coal mine. 75% of China's growing energy needs come from coal, the cheapest and most polluting form of energy. China is the world's largest producer of coal. Seven of the world's ten most polluted cities are in China, largely due to coal use and the country's dilapidated heavy industries..Dàtóng, Shanxi Province, China. 11/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    china0511-015.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale following the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-372.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale following the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-371.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-362.jpg
  • Christine Lagarde, French minister of Economy, Finance and Industry, speaking with Roger Cohen, columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, at the Académie Diplomatique Internationale before speaking at a the Forum for New Diplomacy..Paris, France. 25/01/2011.
    C.Lagarde110125-354.jpg
  • The Gate of Heavenly Peace leading to the forbidden city. China's transformation from a centralized, managed economy to a growing free market economy has come with a price to pay. Seven of the ten most polluted cities in the world are located in China, due primarily to the country's dependence on coal for energy and dilapidated heavy industries..Beijing, China. 06/11/2005.Photo © J.B. Russell
    China0511-052.jpg
  • Coal miners hold a rally in front of the communist headquarters in Donetsk during the coal miner general strike in the industrial Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. In early 1991 following decades of Cold War sanctions and isolation, the Soviet Union's economy was in ruins, prices were rising and living conditions for average people untenable. Despite Mikhail Gorbachev's Perestroika and Glasnost reforms, Ukrainian coal miners went on strike for political change at the Kremlin and had wide popular support. Later that year Ukraine voted for independence by a margin of 90%, effectively bringing an end to the Soviet Union.<br />
Donetsk, Donbas, Ukraine, USSR. 15/04/1991.
    19910400_USSR_159.jpg
  • Food donations to suppoort the striking coal miners at the strike committee offices during the general strike in the industrial Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. In early 1991 following decades of Cold War sanctions and isolation, the Soviet Union's economy was in ruins, prices were rising and living conditions for average people untenable. Despite Mikhail Gorbachev's Perestroika and Glasnost reforms, Ukrainian coal miners went on strike for political change at the Kremlin and had wide popular support. Later that year Ukraine voted for independence by a margin of 90%, effectively bringing an end to the Soviet Union.<br />
Donetsk, Donbas, Ukraine, USSR. 20/04/1991.
    19910400_USSR_152.jpg
  • The villagers of Diagho harvest palm nuts in the forest for the artisinale production of palm oil, palm wine and palm oil based soaps. Palm oil products from Casamance are well known and are an important part of the local economy. During the dry season, the men harvest the fruit and the sap of wild palm trees and the women transform the palm nuts into local products. Palm oil production in Casamance remains traditional and has resisted the transformation to industrial scale plantations to satisfy the growing demand from the international food and bio fuel industries that have resulted in large scale deforestation in SE Asia and Latin America. Diagho, Senegal. 10/11/2014.
    WestAfricaClimateChange_056.jpg
  • Men selling livestock on the Zitenga market. The entire economy of the region is derived from the sale of animals, agricultural products and handicrafts on local markets..Zitenga, Burkina Faso. 08/06/2004.Photo © J.B. Russell
    burkina0604-058.jpg
  • A Peoples Movement of Ukraine (RUKH) - a pro Ukrainian, Soviet opposition political party - rally in Donetsk during the coal miner general strike in the industrial Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. In early 1991 following decades of Cold War sanctions and isolation, the Soviet Union's economy was in ruins, prices were rising and living conditions for average people untenable. Despite Mikhail Gorbachev's Perestroika and Glasnost reforms, Ukrainian coal miners went on strike for political change at the Kremlin and had wide popular support. Later that year Ukraine voted for independence by a margin of 90%, effectively bringing an end to the Soviet Union.<br />
Donetsk, Donbas, Ukraine, USSR. 16/04/1991.
    19910400_USSR_180.jpg
  • Coal miners hold a rally in front of the communist headquarters in Donetsk during the coal miner general strike in the industrial Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. In early 1991 following decades of Cold War sanctions and isolation, the Soviet Union's economy was in ruins, prices were rising and living conditions for average people untenable. Despite Mikhail Gorbachev's Perestroika and Glasnost reforms, Ukrainian coal miners went on strike for political change at the Kremlin and had wide popular support. Later that year Ukraine voted for independence by a margin of 90%, effectively bringing an end to the Soviet Union.<br />
Donetsk, Donbas, Ukraine, USSR. 15/04/1991.
    19910400_USSR_175.jpg
  • Coal miners hold a rally in front of the communist headquarters in Donetsk during the coal miner general strike in the industrial Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. In early 1991 following decades of Cold War sanctions and isolation, the Soviet Union's economy was in ruins, prices were rising and living conditions for average people untenable. Despite Mikhail Gorbachev's Perestroika and Glasnost reforms, Ukrainian coal miners went on strike for political change at the Kremlin and had wide popular support. Later that year Ukraine voted for independence by a margin of 90%, effectively bringing an end to the Soviet Union.<br />
Donetsk, Donbas, Ukraine, USSR. 15/04/1991.
    19910400_USSR_171.jpg
  • Coal miners raise the Ukrainian flag in place of the Soviet flag at a rally in front of the communist headquarters in Donetsk during the coal miner general strike in the industrial Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. In early 1991 following decades of Cold War sanctions and isolation, the Soviet Union's economy was in ruins, prices were rising and living conditions for average people untenable. Despite Mikhail Gorbachev's Perestroika and Glasnost reforms, Ukrainian coal miners went on strike for political change at the Kremlin and had wide popular support. Later that year Ukraine voted for independence by a margin of 90%, effectively bringing an end to the Soviet Union.<br />
Donetsk, Donbas, Ukraine, USSR. 15/04/1991.
    19910400_USSR_168.jpg
  • Coal miners hold a rally in front of the communist headquarters in Donetsk during the coal miner general strike in the industrial Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. In early 1991 following decades of Cold War sanctions and isolation, the Soviet Union's economy was in ruins, prices were rising and living conditions for average people untenable. Despite Mikhail Gorbachev's Perestroika and Glasnost reforms, Ukrainian coal miners went on strike for political change at the Kremlin and had wide popular support. Later that year Ukraine voted for independence by a margin of 90%, effectively bringing an end to the Soviet Union.<br />
Donetsk, Donbas, Ukraine, USSR. 15/04/1991.
    19910400_USSR_166.jpg
  • Coal miners hold a rally in front of the communist headquarters in Donetsk during the coal miner general strike in the industrial Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. In early 1991 following decades of Cold War sanctions and isolation, the Soviet Union's economy was in ruins, prices were rising and living conditions for average people untenable. Despite Mikhail Gorbachev's Perestroika and Glasnost reforms, Ukrainian coal miners went on strike for political change at the Kremlin and had wide popular support. Later that year Ukraine voted for independence by a margin of 90%, effectively bringing an end to the Soviet Union.<br />
Donetsk, Donbas, Ukraine, USSR. 15/04/1991.
    19910400_USSR_155.jpg
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