Publication date: February 2023 Source: Ecological Economics, Volume 204, Part A Author(s): Valeria Fanghella, Corinne Faure, Marie-Charlotte Guetlein, Joachim Schleich
Publication date: February 2023 Source: Ecological Economics, Volume 204, Part A Author(s): Valeria Fanghella, Corinne Faure, Marie-Charlotte Guetlein, Joachim Schleich
The two protesters did not damage the works but ‘caused their frames slight blemishes’ the Prado museum says Two climate activists have glued their hands to the frames of two paintings by Spanish master Francisco Goya at a museum in Madrid. The protest at the Prado museum, in which both protesters each glued a hand
Corals and coral reefs are found around the islands and atolls of the Pacific. In Vanuatu, the government, with the support of SPC, implemented a coral reef climate change adaptation project based on coral gardening. Photo credit: SPC By Catherine WilsonSydney, Nov 5 2022 (IPS) Today, the window of opportunity for scaled-up global climate action
A new book by Financial Times journalist Dan McCrum tells the story of Wirecard. The German company, which acted as a payment processor (an intermediary between shopper and merchant), appeared to be one of continental Europe’s relatively few successful technology start-ups. Except it wasn’t. In June 2020, Wirecard filed for insolvency. Many of its assets and reported
Research ABSTRACT Community forest management (CFM) is promoted as a strategy to reach multiple development outcomes including the sustainable use of forest resources, forest conservation, poverty alleviation, and social equity through the devolution of rights to forest-dependent communities. Developing effective and equitable strategies to promote CFM requires consensus on its goals and the approaches for
Vast carbon store may be close to point where it could flip from absorbing CO2 to releasing it, research shows The Congo peatlands are a huge carbon “timebomb” that could be triggered by the climate crisis, research has shown. The peatlands flipped from storing carbon to releasing it into the atmosphere when the climate became
Research ABSTRACT Many caribou populations are declining across the Circumpolar North, presenting challenges for many Indigenous Peoples who have deep and enduring relationships with this animal. In Labrador, Canada, caribou herds have recently experienced population declines, including the George River herd, which has dropped by 99% from its peak, leading to the enactment of a
Illegal fishing is not only affecting the environment but impacting on the livelihoods of millions of fishers are also at stake, according to a new report. Here residents wave to fishers on boats in Saint Louis, Senegal. Credit: Carsten ten Brink/Flickr By Ed HoltBRATISLAVA, Nov 2 2022 (IPS) As a new report lays bare the
View of the bulk fuel plant in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. Because the kingdom needs oil prices to remain high to balance its budget, it pushed OPEC and its allies to decide on a production cut as of Nov. 1. CREDIT: Aramco By Humberto MárquezCARACAS, Nov 1 2022 (IPS) The decision to cut oil production by
Research, part of a special feature on The Many Facets of Forest Resilience in the Lake Tahoe Basin ABSTRACT Rapid environmental changes challenge the resilience of wildlands. The western portion of the Lake Tahoe Basin in California is an important ecological and cultural hotspot that is at risk of degradation from current and future environmental