News headlines for “Environmental Issues”, page 882
MALAWI: Patrilineal Inheritance Prevents Women’s Access to Land
- Inter Press Service

Mercy Gondwe, 51, from Rumphi in northern Malawi, was married for 34 years. When her husband died in 2008, she assumed she would inherit the land they had been cultivating together since they got married. But this was not the case.
DEVELOPMENT-SRI LANKA: Water Woes Fall on Women’s Shoulders
- Inter Press Service

As a wife of a rice farmer and mother of two children aged nine and two, Sanjeevani Bandara’s days are packed with chores. Yet while she used to be able to keep up with all she has to do in a day, this Sri Lankan mother now finds herself struggling to accomplish even the most basic tasks.
ENVIRONMENT-MEXICO: Green Areas to the Highest Bidder
- Inter Press Service

Activists in Mexico complain that the deforestation threatening the environmental health of Mexico has been accentuated by the granting of public areas to private companies.
EUROPE: Green Finance Wise, or Otherwise
- Inter Press Service

A plan to give the European Union's lending arm a beefed-up mandate for financing the fight against climate change has drawn a sceptical response from campaigners on green and economic justice issues.
MEXICO: Scientists Reinvent the Corn Tortilla
- Inter Press Service

The process of making corn tortillas - the filling, age-old traditional food throughout much of Mexico and Central America - pollutes huge volumes of water and consumes a great deal of energy.
MALAWI: Climate Change Is Changing Farming Methods
- Inter Press Service

As they slept soundly on the night of Feb. 28, a family of four was killed when their house collapsed over their heads in Malawi’s southern district of Chikhwawa.
BIODIVERSITY: CITES Faces Political Storm over Tuna Ban
- Inter Press Service

The vast majority of the species protected by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, or CITES, live on land, but as marine species come under increasing pressure from unsustainable fishing and a range of climate change-related threats that focus is beginning to shift.
HEALTH: Potato Drags GM Food Into Europe
- Inter Press Service

Genetically modified (GM) foods appear to be back on the European Union's political menu - thanks to a potato.
CLIMATE CHANGE: Arctic Shelf Leaking Potent Greenhouse Gas
- Inter Press Service

The frozen cap trapping billions of tonnes of methane under the cold waters of the Arctic Ocean is leaking and venting the powerful greenhouse gas into the atmosphere, new research shows.
LATIN AMERICA: Canada Moves to Oversee Mining Firms
- Inter Press Service

Amidst allegations that Canadian mining companies operating in Latin America have been complicit in the murders and harassment of activists, several positive developments in Canada are seen as a source of hope that firms may begin to be held accountable on human rights and environmental questions.

