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BBC News

environment. —— two things. the glaziers are shrinking pretty much before our eyes and much faster than even the climate change specialists had predicted. —— the glaciers. also the war in ukraine. switzerland does not produce its own oil and gas, it must import it. the government successfully argued that if switzerland's economy wants to continue to be as successful as it has been and still is then switzerland needs energy security and that is going to have to mean weaning itself off oil imports or gas imports from somewhere like russia. that means investing in renewables. the swiss government is making a hefty package available, $3.5 billion, that is more than £3 billion, so that households and businesses can have some support to move away from oil and gas and invest in things like heat exchange

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BBC News

carbon emissions by 2050. the final tally showed that 59% of people approved the measures. they will see more than $3.5 billion invested to help households and businesses switch away from using imported oil and gas — and move to renewable energy. the government had backed the measures, saying that switzerland needs to take action to protect the environment, and protect its energy security. but opponents said it would increase the cost of energy and put a strain on finances. with the details, here's our correspondent in bern, imogen foulkes. two key things led to voter support, convincing support to the climate change measures — the first is the effect that global warming is having on the alpine environments. switzerland's glaciers are shrinking pretty much before our eyes, and much faster than even the climate change specialists had predicted. the otherfactor, the war in ukraine — switzerland doesn't produce any

People , Households , Oil , Businesses , Gas , Measures , Tally , 3-5-billion , 2050 , -5-billion , 59 , Swiss-government

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20190225:19:53:00

mass disease, all likely in the lifetime of youred toer will. the uninhabitable earth life after warming. there has been a debate among environmentalists, climate change specialists, about how alarmist they should be and the pace of change and what could happen in the next 80 or so years. it seems like more scientists now are laning towards "we need to really sound the alarm and scare people. >> i think there was a big turning point that was studying the difference between 1.5 degrees and 2 degrees of warming. we're headed for more than four degrees by the end of the century. that could mean $600 trillion

Lifetime , Life , Disease , Go-out-uninaboutble-earth , Youred-toer-will , Change , Warming , Climate-change-specialists , Environmentalists , Debate , Pace , People