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Scientists and engineers fear the UK is about to turn its back on Kopernikus, one of Europe's flagship space projects.
Industry calls on the UK government to invest more in Kopernikus, the world's biggest environmental monitoring project.
A carbon tax will stop us using the atmosphere as a rubbish dump and will make it cheaper to protect it.
Why climate campaigners should stop trying to persuade people into lifestyle changes and start dealing with the politics.
A man who planned to walk from Bristol to India without any money gives up in Calais.
The killer of 18-year-old Sally Anne Bowman was a serial sex offender who kept his past hidden from friends, police say.
The dangers of social networks and the use of wi-fi at home and in public are highlighted by a campaign.
A huge fire causes millions of dollars worth of damage to the main market in the Somali capital, Mogadishu.
The long-running dispute between Microsoft and the European Union will finally be decided on Monday.
A man has been arrested after being spotted allegedly sitting in a street with a laptop using someone else's unsecured wireless connection. So is it immoral to take another's wireless internet?
Is a new breed of wireless worker emerging? asks Bill Thompson.
Government skills expert Lord Leitch tells MPs that advice, not a levy, is the way to get more firms training staff.
A preview of the day's racing - plus the Five Live tip of the day.
A look at what's making the headlines in Tuesday's morning newspapers.
BBC Europe Editor Mark Mardell likens the EU to a kingdom of the early Middle Ages.
Having a system of sanctions is an effective way of enforcing co-operation, a study says.
The blindspots of the Mexican-American relationship are exposed in southern California, Matthew Wells writes.
Google's controversial plan to digitise library collections will be a vital resource for good, US publishers are told.
Men appear to get greater satisfaction than women when witnessing retribution, research suggests.
Almost 50,000 former Railtrack shareholders are taking on the government in Britain's biggest ever legal joint action? How do so many people go to court?
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