News headlines for “Nature and Animal Conservation”, page 18

  1. ‘Only a Handful of Environmental Organisations Still Dare Challenge Corporate Projects in Court’

    - Inter Press Service

      CIVICUS speaks to Cristinel Buzatu, regional legal advisor for Central and Eastern Europe at Greenpeace, about how Romania’s state gas company is weaponising the courts to silence environmental opposition.

  2. How Mongolia Can Expedite It’s Just Transition Plans to Include Its Nomads

    - Inter Press Service

    ULAANBAATAR, July 9 (IPS) - Youth activist Gereltuya Bayanmukh still reflects on the events in her formative years that inspired her to become a climate activist. When she was a child, she would visit her grandparents in a village 20 km to the south of the border between Russia and Mongolia.

  3. World Bank’s IFC Finally Adopts Remedial Action Framework

    - Inter Press Service

    WASHINGTON DC, July 8 (IPS) - The World Bank’s private sector arm has raised the bar — and others may follow. On April 15, the International Finance Corporation (IFC) became the first development finance institution to adopt a formal remedy policy, publishing its Remedial Action Framework (RAF) to address environmental and social harm caused by IFC-supported investment projects.

  4. Lessons from South Africa on Monitoring the Impact of Invasive Trees on Water Resources

    - Inter Press Service

    CAPE TOWN, South Africa, July 4 (IPS) - Concerns about the impacts of invasive species is not new; it dates to the 19th century. The term was popularized in Charles Elton’s 1958 book “The Ecology of Invasions by Animals and Plants”. However, the concept gained significant attention in the 1990s and early 2000s as academic interest surged. This led to an increase in publications by invasion biologists.

  5. African Fish Workers Excluded From International Trade Deals: Report

    - Inter Press Service

    BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe, July 3 (IPS) - A new report has raised concerns about the exclusion of African fish workers from trade protocols between their governments and developed countries, resulting in impoverished communities relying on fishing.

  6. Pumped Storage Hydropower is an Option for Latin America

    - Inter Press Service

    CARACAS, July 2 (IPS) - Having hydroelectric power without damming rivers, dismantling the environment or displacing populations is possible in Latin America and the Caribbean, with reversible power plants that take advantage of their mountainous geography, and pave the way for only renewable sources to generate electricity.

  7. Multi-Year Drought Gives Birth to Extremist Violence, Girls Most Vulnerable

    - Inter Press Service

    SEVILLE & BHUBANESWAR, July 2 (IPS) - While droughts creep in stealthily, their impacts are often more devastating and far-reaching than any other disaster. Inter-community conflict, extremist violence, and violence and injustice against vulnerable girls and women happen at the intersection of climate-induced droughts and drought-impoverished communities.

  8. The Juggling of Aid: How WFP is Delivering More with Less

    - Inter Press Service

    UNITED NATIONS, July 1 (IPS) - Serious-to-severe food insecurity has been widely felt among those living through the worst, protracted humanitarian crises. For organizations like the World Food Programme (WFP), they must work under the “relentless demand” for humanitarian aid, including food.

  9. FFD4 Must Deliver for the World’s Most Vulnerable Nations

    - Inter Press Service

    UNITED NATIONS, July 1 (IPS) - Five years from the 2030 deadline for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), we face a development emergency. The promise to eradicate poverty, combat climate change, and build a sustainable future for all is slipping away. The SDG financing gap has ballooned to over $4 trillion annually—a crisis compounded by declining aid, rising trade barriers, and a fragile global economy.

  10. Science Is Useless if No One Understands It

    - Inter Press Service

    NAIROBI, July 1 (IPS) - Despite delivering life-saving medicines, more nutritious crops, and transformative technologies like artificial intelligence (AI), science remains widely misunderstood, polarizing, and underappreciated. Much of this, experts say, comes down to one persistent issue: poor communication.

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