ENVIRONMENT Renewables grew at fastest rate in two decades last year, IEA says in new report

Pippa Stevens

Peter Cade | Stone | Getty Images

Peter Cade | Stone | Getty Images

Renewable power generation grew at the fastest rate in two decades last year, and that growth is set to continue in the aftermath of the pandemic, according to a new report from the International Energy Agency.

IEA said policy decisions in China and the U.S., among other things, fueled the growth, counteracting the impact of supply chain disruptions from the coronavirus.

Renewable electricity added last year jumped 45% to 280 gigawatts (GW), marking the largest year-over-year increase since 1999.

The Paris-based agency envisions this rate of growth becoming the “new normal.” IEA sees 270 GW added in 2021, followed by 280 GW in 2022. These estimates are 25% higher than the agency’s prior forecasts established last November.

“Wind and solar power are giving us more reasons to be optimistic about our climate goals as they break record after record,” said Fatih Birol, IEA’s executive director. “Last year, the increase in renewable capacity accounted for 90% of the entire global power sector’s expansion.”

In its annual World Energy Outlook report released in November, IEA said solar is poised to become the new king of electricity as falling prices make solar cheaper than new coal and gas-fired plants.

IEA believes solar installations will continue to break records, and predicts more than 160 GW installed annually by 2022. The agency said that’s almost 50% above 2019′s pre-pandemic installations. Utility-scale projects are expected to propel the growth, rising from over 55% of annual additions to nearly 70% by 2022.

“Following the pandemic-induced slowdown of the first half of 2020, U.S. residential and commercial markets recovered fully and even grew in the latter part of the year,” the report said.

Global wind capacity additions jumped more than 90% in 2020 to hit 114 GW, although IEA envisions a slowdown in growth during both 2021 and 2022.

Renewable capacity growth in China is poised to stabilize below 2020′s record level thanks to production that was pulled forward, but any slowdown will be balanced by acceleration in other regions.

In the U.S., some developers pushed projects forward since the tax incentives were set to expire at the end of 2020. The credits were ultimately extended by former president Donald Trump in December, and President Joe Biden has outlined additional plans to extend them further.

“Declining costs, a recovering distributed PV sector and growing interest in corporate PPAs offer hope for more extensive solar PV expansion,” the report said.

Biden’s recently unveiled infrastructure package earmarks more than $600 billion for clean energy spending, including $100 billion for the power grid and $174 billion to spur the development and rollout of electric vehicles. The plan also calls for a 10-year extension of the tax credits.

The IEA’s forecast does not factor in the potential infrastructure bill or the administration’s recently announced emissions reduction target.

“If enacted, the bill would drive a much stronger acceleration in the deployment of renewables after 2022,” the report said.

THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 12): Uzoma Asagwara on How Self-Actualization promotes Sustainable Development

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR TRANSCRIPT


Summary of the Discussion

This month’s episode started with a short introduction of our speaker, Uzoma Asagwara, and the introduction of the topic, how self-actualization promotes sustainable development. Uzoma spoke extensively on the journey of identifying their identity and embracing it. They further spoke on the inequalities and inequities in society and the need to address them in order to achieve the sustainable development goal.


LISTEN TO PODCAST


ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Uzoma Asagwara is a Registered Psychiatric Nurse, former member of the Canadian National basketball team and recently made history as the first Black, Queer, Gender Non-Conforming person elected to the Manitoba Legislative Assembly and across Canada.

Uzoma Asagwara is a Registered Psychiatric Nurse, former member of the Canadian National basketball team and recently made history as the first Black, Queer, Gender Non-Conforming person elected to the Manitoba Legislative Assembly and across Canada.

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).



Favourite Quote

When we ensure that there are no barriers in the way of anybody accessing the services that they need, when we take care of those in our communities who are most vulnerable, it benefits, absolutely, everybody.
— Uzoma Asagwara

At least 1m people facing starvation as Madagascar’s drought worsens

Kaamil Ahmed and Rivonala Razafison

People eating termites and clay as UN says acute malnutrition has almost doubled this year in south

This youth travelled for more than an hour to find water for his family of 10 after recent light rain but found the well was dry. Photograph: Ainga Razafy/MSF

This youth travelled for more than an hour to find water for his family of 10 after recent light rain but found the well was dry. Photograph: Ainga Razafy/MSF

Madagascar’s worst drought in 40 years has left more than a million people facing a year of desperate food shortages.

The south of the island will produce less than half its usual harvest in the coming months because of low rains, prolonging a hunger crisis already affecting half the Grand Sud area’s population, the UN estimates.

The south saw 50% of its usual rains during the October planting season, in a fourth year of drought.

Julie Reversé, emergency coordinator in Madagascar for Médecins Sans Frontières, said: “Without rain, they will not be able to return to the fields and feed their families. And some do not hesitate to say that it is death that awaits them if the situation does not change, and the rain does not fall.”

According to the Famine Early Warning System Network, most poor families have to rely on foraging for wild foods and leaves that are difficult to eat and can be dangerous for children and pregnant women. Aid agencies have reported people eating termites and mixing clay with tamarind.

Reversé said violent sandstorms (known as tiomena) in December made the situation worse by covering farming land and food such as the cactus fruit, which is often relied on during the “lean” season.

“Most of the people living in the southern part of Madagascar rely essentially on their harvest for food and income. Because of the drought and the lack of rain, people cannot cultivate what they usually eat or sell at the market,” said Reversé.

Jean-Louis Tovosoa, 52, a father of 15 who lives on the outskirts of Ambovombe, in Androy, the southernmost region of Madagascar, said life had become very difficult. “This year, we have nothing to eat. We rely on God’s providence for our survival. We are also asking the government to assist us. Otherwise, we will die,” he said.

“Over the five last years, tiomenas have become more and more frequent. They have been affecting a wide range of territory. There were no rains over the three last years. Because of the persistent drought, violent winds have swept away the good soil for cultivation. They have killed the cactus plants, which are vital for us in the time of famine. They have also destroyed crops and killed animals such as zebus [cattle], sheep and goats.”

Prickly pears are one of the last foods available in this arid environment. These women walked for a day to collect fruit for their stall. Photograph: Ainga Razafy/MSF

Prickly pears are one of the last foods available in this arid environment. These women walked for a day to collect fruit for their stall. Photograph: Ainga Razafy/MSF

The UN World Food Programme says acute malnutrition in children under five has almost doubled over the past four months in most districts in the south. Ambovombe has the highest rates.

On Friday the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), a multi-agency body that monitors global food security, issued an alert of a “sustained deterioration in food insecurity in the Grand South of Madagascar from April to December 2021”.

It said: “Over 1.1 million people are in high acute food insecurity due to insufficient rainfall, rising food prices and sandstorms. The lean season is expected to begin earlier than usual for the current consumption year, as households will deplete their low food stocks due to minimal production.”

Voriandro Tiandrainy, 42, a father of four from the district of Toliara II, on the western coast, said the drought had left many farmers unable to grow rice. “We enjoyed a wet climate before. Over recent years, it has become more and more dry. Farmers have had to abandon rice cultivation,” he said. Many people are now eating just one meal a day.

“Parents are also unable to pay school fees for their children. Moreover, a new disease has affected our zebus. We have never known this disease; it has killed 10 to 20% of the livestock.”

In response to the crisis, MSF began running a mobile clinic in late March and has so far treated more than 800 children for malnutrition, a third of whom were in a severe condition.

Reversé said MSF staff are also noticing other illnesses in the areas they work in, including bilharzia (a waterborne disease caused by parasitic flatworms), diarrhoea, malaria and respiratory infections. They said the illnesses were caused by malnutrition, as well as a lack of clean water.

According to the UN’s food agency, the number of people suffering from hunger has risen by about 85% on last year because of the accumulative effects of years of drought and people having to sell livestock and belongings to buy food.

People in the south are still sending family members to the cities to look for work but with little success because the Covid-19 pandemic has shut down small businesses and ended the seasonal work created by the tourism industry that had provided crucial income.

‘The next decade will be all about heat’: can Athens head off climate crisis?


Helena Smith

Smog settles over central Athens. Photograph: Eye Ubiquitous/Alamy

Smog settles over central Athens. Photograph: Eye Ubiquitous/Alamy

Like every Athens mayor, Kostas Bakoyannis is acutely aware of the illustrious heritage of one of the world’s oldest cities. After all, he says, it is busts of Pericles and his mistress Aspasia that adorn the entrance of the neoclassical town hall. From the windows of his cavernous office, he can glimpse the Parthenon through the jumble of concrete buildings and antennas.

But Bakoyannis prefers to talk about the present, not least his plans for fountains, parks, and trees – antidotes to the afflictions of more modern times.

“When you’re the mayor of Athens you are not in dialogue with history,” he says. “You’re in dialogue with the problems, needs, aspirations and hopes of present-day Athenians and anyone who might visit Athens even for a day.”

With that mission, Bakoyannis has his work cut out for him. Decades of reckless urban planning are catching up with the city. Pollution, densely packed neighbourhoods, and traffic congestion – byproducts of an uncontrolled building spree that began in the 1950s – are still evident today.

In conditions often likened to a pressure cooker, temperatures can surpass 40C (104F) in the summer. “Our models show annual mean temperatures across the Mediterranean increasing by up to 2C over the next 30 years,” says Christos Zerefos, a professor of atmospheric physics. “In the summer the air temperature will rise by more than 3C. Ecosystems will suffer.”

Bakoyannis, the scion of a political dynasty, was elected to the post in 2019. He knows time is of the essence.

A pocket park in Athens. Photograph: Vassilis Triandafyllou/Reuters

A pocket park in Athens. Photograph: Vassilis Triandafyllou/Reuters

“What we are facing is not a climate crisis but clearly a climate emergency,” he says. “If we’re to do our job well we have to adhere to the principles of resilience and sustainability.”

A municipal employee works at a pocket park in Athens, Greece. Photograph: Louiza Vradi/Reuters

A municipal employee works at a pocket park in Athens, Greece. Photograph: Louiza Vradi/Reuters

With the help of state and private sector support, EU structural funds and municipal levies, the budget allocated to green space has quadrupled. Every year €10m is earmarked for nature conservation, according to Bakoyannis, whose candidacy was backed by the centre-right New Democracy party now in government and led by his uncle, the prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis.

Public-private partnerships, until recently a rarity in Greece, will help finance a huge “double regeneration” project that involves a football stadium in the heart of Athens being turned into an urban park, and a green overhaul for the industrial wasteland in the poorer western suburbs where the arena will be moved to.

Progress has been made in reducing car lanes to reclaim public space for pedestrians and cyclists, rejuvenating the hills of Athens, fixing fountains in public squares and creating pocket parks.

All the projects have one goal: to offset the challenges Europe’s warmest city is likely to confront as a result of rising temperatures.

“The next decade is going to be all about heat,” says Lenio Myrivili, co-chair of the Washington-based Extreme Heat Resilience Alliance, who advises Bakoyannis. “How we manage it and prepare for it is going to be vital.”

A former Athens vice-mayor herself, Myrivili is in no doubt of what lies in store if action isn’t taken.The Greek capital has been singled out in studies on the risks posed by climate change. An analysis of 571 European cities by Newcastle University in 2018 predicted it would experience the worst increases in severe drought and heatwaves by 2050. In a similar study, the ratings agency Moody’s also ranked the Greek capital highest in terms of exposure to rising temperatures. With heatwaves likely to become more frequent and extreme, it forecast that Greece’s credit strength would also become “sensitive to climate change …. [particularly] if heatwaves were to depress tourist activity”.

Prior to the pandemic Athens had become increasingly popular as a tourist destination, attracting over six million visitors in 2019.

“It’s imperative that we shield the city through heat mitigation,” says Myrivili. “The best way to do this is by introducing nature, biodiversity and ecosystems into urban areas. We’ll also need to more cleverly manage our water resources and ultimately bring the rivers of Attica, so scandalously cemented over, back to life.”

Athens was the first city to sign up to Prince Charles’ Terra Carta, (Earth Charter), described as a roadmap to a green post-pandemic recovery, when the British royal visited the capital for celebrations marking the 200th anniversary of the war of independence last month.

After a “lost decade” as a result of the nation’s prolonged economic crisis, Bakoyannis says he is determined not to lose more time because of the coronavirus crisis.

Exploiting the quietude of lockdown, municipal teams have focused on revamping forgotten parks and hills.

In Omonia square, the central plaza also within view of the Acropolis, analysis has shown temperatures dropping by up to four degrees since a multi-jet fountain was installed last year.

Not all the public works have gone down well. The mayor’s eagerness for “liberating” public space has its critics. Bakoyannis, who has also vowed to tackle vehicle emissions by reducing traffic in the city centre, was forced to hand back a traffic lane on a major avenue amid opposition over the move.

Children play in a pocket park in Kolonos in Athens. Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shutterstock6

Children play in a pocket park in Kolonos in Athens. Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shutterstock6

“Like most Athenians I’d love the city centre to be pedestrianised,” says Kostas Hadzopoulos out walking his yorkshire terrier around the freshly-planted pocket park in Pangrati, among the most congested districts in central Athens. “But a lot of these moves seem slapdash and ill-thought-out. That said, this was a rubbish dump before, and now it’s a breath of fresh air.”

Bakoyannis is sanguine in the face of criticism that has also been made by his political opponents.

“Change is never easy,” he says. “At the end of the day improving the quality of life is not ideological… We’re all in this fight together.”

UN raises serious human rights concerns over Australia’s India travel ban

Daniel Hurst

‘Nobody’s going to be jailed … at this time,’ deputy PM Michael McCormack says

The UN has questioned whether Australia’s India travel ban is consistent with the country’s human rights obligations. Photograph: Matt Jelonek/Getty Images

The UN has questioned whether Australia’s India travel ban is consistent with the country’s human rights obligations. Photograph: Matt Jelonek/Getty Images

UN human rights officials have raised “serious concerns” about the Morrison government’s ban on Australians returning from India, and the severe penalties attached to breaches.

The office of the UN high commissioner for human rights has questioned whether the controversial temporary measure – which can attract maximum penalties of five years’ imprisonment or $66,600 – is consistent with Australia’s human rights obligations.

“We have serious concerns about whether the Biosecurity Determination – and the severe penalties which can be imposed for its breach – meets Australia’s human rights obligations,” a spokesperson for the office, Rupert Colville, said early on Wednesday.

“In particular, article 12 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which is binding on Australia, provides that no one shall be arbitrarily deprived of the right to enter his own country.”

In response to a request for comment from Guardian Australia, Colville said the UN human rights committee “has emphasised the narrow authority to refuse nationals’ return, and considers that there are few, if any, circumstances in which deprivation of the right to enter one’s own country could be reasonable.

“In assessing the issue of arbitrary deprivation, key factors to be taken into account are its necessity to achieve a legitimate end and its proportionality, including whether it is the least intrusive approach to accomplish its public health objectives.

“We note that the measure is scheduled to be reconsidered on 15 May.”

The determination – criminalising the return to Australia of anyone who has been in India in the past 14 days – was put in place by the health minister, Greg Hunt, late last Friday night, using existing biosecurity laws, but has triggered a backlash.

Amid mounting pressure over its hardline approach, including from within Coalition ranks, the immigration minister, Alex Hawke, is scheduled to meet community leaders on Wednesday to discuss the ban that is blocking 9,000 people, including 650 who are considered vulnerable, from returning to Australia.

Scott Morrison and senior ministers have said they are acting in the interests of keeping Australians safe and have played down the prospect that the harsh penalties would actually be imposed.

The deputy prime minister, Michael McCormack, said the prime minister had “made it quite clear yesterday that nobody’s going to be jailed”.

“Obviously, there needs to be a hardline taken as far as the overall act being in place, but nobody’s going to be jailed ... at this time,” McCormack told ABC News Breakfast on Wednesday. “The prime minister made it clear.

“We have taken this pause. We have made it in the national interests. We have done it, based on the best possible medical advice. It’s until May 15. We review it constantly, as you’d expect us to do.”

The Labor leader, Anthony Albanese, described the government’s handling of the issue as “a shambles”, asking: “Why do you make an announcement in the middle of the night about threats of five years’ jail and considerable fines and then days later say that we won’t implement the law?”

In April the UN human rights committee requested that Australia promptly allow the return of two vaccinated citizens from the US, as the body prepared to consider their complaints about the impact of Australia’s strict caps on international arrivals.

Assisted by the leading human rights lawyer Geoffrey Robertson QC, the citizens argue that the implementation of those caps clashes with the ICCPR.

Campaigners have previously described the situation as “dire” for a lot of Australians who were unable to return home, and say there is a sense of “losing hope”.

Revealed: 2,000 refugee deaths linked to illegal EU pushbacks

Lorenzo Tondo

A Guardian analysis finds EU countries used brutal tactics to stop nearly 40,000 asylum seekers crossing borders

Migrant rescue patrol in the Aegean Sea by the Turkish coastguard. A case has been filed against the Greek state that claims patrol boats towed migrants back to Turkish waters and abandoned them. Photograph: Erdem Şahin/EPA

Migrant rescue patrol in the Aegean Sea by the Turkish coastguard. A case has been filed against the Greek state that claims patrol boats towed migrants back to Turkish waters and abandoned them. Photograph: Erdem Şahin/EPA

EU member states have used illegal operations to push back at least 40,000 asylum seekers from Europe’s borders during the pandemic, linked to the death of more than 2,000 people, the Guardian can reveal.

In one of the biggest mass expulsions in decades, European countries, supported by EU’s border agency Frontex, systematically pushed back refugees, including children fleeing from wars, in their thousands, using illegal tactics ranging from assault to brutality during detention or transportation.

The Guardian’s analysis is based on reports released by UN agencies, combined with a database of incidents collected by non-governmental organisations. According to charities, with the onset of Covid-19, the regularity and brutality of pushback practices has grown.

The findings come as the EU’s anti-fraud watchdog, Olaf, has launched an investigation into Frontex over allegations of harassment, misconduct and unlawful operations aimed at stopping asylum seekers from reaching EU shores.

According to the International Organization for Migration, in 2020 almost 100,000 immigrants arrived in Europe by sea and by land compared with nearly 130,000 in 2019 and 190,000 in 2017.

Since January 2020, despite the drop in numbers, Italy, Malta, Greece, Croatia and Spain have accelerated their hardline migration agenda. Since the introduction of partial or complete border closures to halt the outbreak of coronavirus, these countries have paid non-EU states and enlisted private vessels to intercept boats in distress at sea and push back passengers into detention centres. There have been repeated reports of people being beaten, robbed, stripped naked at frontiers or left at sea.

In 2020 Croatia, whose police patrol the EU’s longest external border, have intensified systemic violence and pushbacks of migrants to Bosnia. The Danish Refugee Council (DRC) recorded nearly 18,000 migrants pushed back by Croatia since the start of the pandemic. Over the last year and a half, the Guardian has collected testimonies of migrants who have allegedly been whipped, robbed, sexually abused and stripped naked by members of the Croatian police. Some migrants said they were spray-painted with red crosses on their heads by officers who said the treatment was the “cure against coronavirus”.

According to an annual report released on Tuesday, the Border Violence Monitoring Network (BVMN), a coalition of 13 NGOs documenting illegal pushbacks in the western Balkans, abuse and disproportionate force was present in nearly 90% of testimonies in 2020 collected from Croatia, a 10% increase on 2019.

In April, the Guardian revealed how a woman from Afghanistan was allegedly sexually abused and held at knifepoint by a Croatian border police officer during a search of migrants on the border with Bosnia.

“Despite the European Commission’s engagement with Croatian authorities in recent months, we have seen virtually no progress, neither on investigations of the actual reports, nor on the development of independent border monitoring mechanisms,” said Nicola Bay, DRC country director for Bosnia. “Every single pushback represents a violation of international and EU law – whether it involves violence or not.”

Since January 2020, Greece has pushed back about 6,230 asylum seekers from its shores, according to data from BVMN. The report stated that in 89% of the pushbacks, “BVMN has observed the disproportionate and excessive use of force. This alarming number shows that the use of force in an abusive, and therefore illicit, way has become a normality […]

“Extremely cruel examples of police violence documented in 2020 included prolonged excessive beatings (often on naked bodies), water immersion, the physical abuse of women and children, the use of metal rods to inflict injury.”

In testimonies, people described how their hands were tied to the bars of cells and helmets put on their heads before beatings to avoid visible bruising.

A lawsuit filed against the Greek state in April at the European court of human rights accused Athens of abandoning dozens of migrants in life rafts at sea, after some had been beaten. The case claims that Greek patrol boats towed migrants back to Turkish waters and abandoned them at sea without food, water, lifejackets or any means to call for help.

BVMN said: “Whether it be using the Covid-19 pandemic and the national lockdown to serve as a cover for pushbacks, fashioning open-air prisons, or preventing boats from entering Greek waters by firing warning shots toward boats, the evidence indicates the persistent refusal to uphold democratic values, human rights and international and European law.”

According to UNHCR data, since the start of the pandemic, Libyan authorities – with Italian support since 2017, when Rome ceded responsibility for overseeing Mediterranean rescue operations to Libya – intercepted and pushed back to Tripoli about 15,500 asylum seekers. The controversial strategy has caused the forced return of thousands to Libyan detention centres where, according to first hand reports, they face torture. Hundreds have drowned when neither Libya nor Italy intervened.

SOS Méditerranée operates the Ocean Viking, one of the few remaining NGO rescue boats in the Mediterranean. Photograph: Flavio Gasperini/SOS Mediterranee

SOS Méditerranée operates the Ocean Viking, one of the few remaining NGO rescue boats in the Mediterranean. Photograph: Flavio Gasperini/SOS Mediterranee

“In 2020 this practice continued, with an increasingly important role being played by Frontex planes, sighting boats at sea and communicating their position to the Libyan coastguard,” said Matteo de Bellis, migration researcher at Amnesty International. “So, while Italy at some point even used the pandemic as an excuse to declare that its ports were not safe for the disembarkation of people rescued at sea, it had no problem with the Libyan coastguard returning people to Tripoli. Even when this was under shelling or when hundreds were forcibly disappeared immediately after disembarkation.”

In April, Italy and Libya were accused of deliberately ignoring a mayday call from a migrant boat in distress in Libyan waters, as waves reached six metres. A few hours later, an NGO rescue boat discovered dozens of bodies floating in the waves. That day 130 migrants were lost at sea.

In April, in a joint investigation with the Italian Rai News and the newspaper Domani, the Guardian saw documents from Italian prosecutors detailing conversations between two commanders of the Libyan coastguard and an Italian coastguard officer in Rome. The transcripts appeared to expose the non-responsive behaviour of the Libyan officers and their struggling to answer the distress calls which resulted in hundreds of deaths. At least five NGO boats remain blocked in Italian ports as authorities claim administrative reasons for holding them.

Malta, which declared its ports closed early last year, citing the pandemic, has continued to push back hundreds of migrants using two strategies: enlisting private vessels to intercept asylum seekers and force them back to Libya or turning them away with directions to Italy.

“Between 2014 and 2017, Malta was able to count on Italy to take responsibility for coordinating rescues and allowing disembarkations,” said De Bellis. “But when Italy and the EU withdrew their ships from the central Mediterranean, to leave it in Libya’s hands, they left Malta more exposed. In response, from early 2020 the Maltese government used tactics to avoid assisting refugees and migrants in danger at sea, including arranging unlawful pushbacks to Libya by private fishing boats, diverting boats rather than rescuing them, illegally detaining hundreds of people on ill-equipped ferries off Malta’s waters, and signing a new agreement with Libya to prevent people from reaching Malta.”

Last May, a series of voice messages obtained by the Guardian confirmed the Maltese government’s strategy to use private vessels, acting at the behest of its armed forces, to intercept crossings and return refugees to Libyan detention centres.

In February 2020, the European court of human rights was accused of “completely ignoring the reality” after it ruled Spain did not violate the prohibition of collective expulsion, as asylum applications could be made at the official border crossing point. Relying on this judgment, Spain’s constitutional court upheld “border rejections” provided certain safeguards apply.

Last week, the bodies of 24 migrants from sub-Saharan Africa were found by Spain’s maritime rescue. They are believed to have died of thirst and hunger while attempting to reach the Canary Islands. In 2020, according to the UNHCR, 788 migrants died trying to reach Spain.

The Guardian has approached Frontex for comment. Previously the agency has said it will be “cooperating fully” with Olaf.

Increased cancer risk for petroleum industry workers and people living near plants: New UN study

UN NEWS

Фото ООН I An oil platform in the Caspian Sea. Petroleum plants that process oil products can prove an increased cancer risk to those working there, or living nearby, a new IARC study shows.

Фото ООН I An oil platform in the Caspian Sea. Petroleum plants that process oil products can prove an increased cancer risk to those working there, or living nearby, a new IARC study shows.

The findings add to increasing evidence of the health consequences of air pollution from petroleum extraction and refining.

Types of cancer risk

The review identified an increased risk of mesothelioma, skin melanoma, multiple myeloma, and cancers of the prostate and urinary bladder, and conversely, decreased risk of cancers of the oesophagus, stomach, colon, rectum, and pancreas.

Offshore petroleum work was associated with an increased risk of lung cancer and leukaemia.

Living close to petroleum facilities was also associated with an increased risk of childhood leukaemia.

Scientists in the Environment and Lifestyle Epidemiology Branch of the agency carried out 41 cohort studies, 14 case–control studies, and two cross-sectional studies to compile their review.

Their findings have been published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.

More research needed

The authors point out that further studies on the effect of exposure to petroleum and its closest derivatives (e.g. benzene) are needed in order to identify how they modify cancer risk.

In particular, there is a need for targeted studies in under-researched areas of high petroleum production with presumably higher exposures.

The scientists argue that the best way forward may be an international consortium to guide new studies in Africa, the Middle East, and Asia, in order to harmonize how studies are carried out and how exposure is assessed.

Rich nations’ climate targets will mean global heating of 2.4C – study

Fiona Harvey

Rise is a 0.2C improvement on previous forecast but still substantially above goal of Paris climate agreement

A power plant and traffic in New York. The figures give an idea both of the importance of the contribution by the US – the world’s second biggest emitter – and other rich nations in setting fresh emissions targets. Photograph: Justin Lane/EPA

A power plant and traffic in New York. The figures give an idea both of the importance of the contribution by the US – the world’s second biggest emitter – and other rich nations in setting fresh emissions targets. Photograph: Justin Lane/EPA

New climate targets announced by the US and other rich nations in recent weeks have put the world on track for global heating of about 2.4C by – the end of the century, research has found.

That is a 0.2C improvement on the previous forecast of 2.6C, but still substantially above the Paris goal of holding temperature rises to no more than 2C above pre-industrial levels, with an aspiration to limit heating to 1.5C.

Analysts have said the goals will still be within reach if key countries step up with better plans and if all countries bring forward new policies to meet their commitments.

The forecasts from the Climate Action Tracker are necessarily uncertain, but the figures give an idea both of the importance of the contribution by the US – the world’s second biggest emitter – and other rich nations in setting fresh emissions targets, and of how much more remains to be done to meet the Paris goals.

Tougher targets from China, the world’s biggest greenhouse gas emitter, and other countries will be needed to keep the Paris goals within reach, the analysis found.

While countries responsible for nearly three-quarters of global emissions have set or are considering goals to reduce carbon to net zero, Climate Action Tracker found that for most countries, policies are lagging well behind targets.

Many countries’ policies do not yet match their pledges. The analysis found that based on current policies, the world would be expected to warm by 2.9C.

Bill Hare, the chief executive of Climate Analytics, one of the two organisations behind the tracker, said: “It is clear the Paris agreement is driving change, spurring governments to adopt stronger targets, but there is still some way to go, especially given that most governments don’t yet have policies in place to meet their pledges. Governments must urgently step up their action.”

At the White House summit, the US pledged to halve its emissions by 2030, compared with 2005 levels. Canada also submitted a tougher emissions target and Japan, South Africa and Argentina promised to increase their ambition. China, the world’s biggest emitter, restated a promise on curbing future coal use.

Ahead of the Cop26 UN climate talks to be held in Glasgow this November, countries are expected to come up with fresh plans to cut their carbon between now and 2030.

This decade is regarded as crucial for climate action, because if emissions continue to rise for the next 10 years, as they have in previous decades, there will be little chance of holding temperature rises within the Paris limits, which represent the threshold of safety beyond which climate breakdown is likely to become catastrophic and irreversible.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has found that emissions should be roughly halved in the next 10 years, to avoid temperature rises above 1.5C.

China is the biggest emitter yet to produce a national plan for the next 10 years, called a nationally determined contribution (NDC). India, South Korea, New Zealand, Turkey and Saudi Arabia are also among the scores of countries still to submit plans.

Countries responsible for about half of global emissions have submitted NDCs so far, but many are under pressure to toughen them as some are regarded as too weak, including Australia, Russia, Mexico and Brazil.

Niklas Höhne of NewClimate Institute, also a partner in the Climate Action Tracker, said governments were still moving too slowly and needed to emulate the swift response to Covid-19, by treating the climate as a crisis. “Only if all governments flip into emergency mode and propose and implement more short-term action [can] global emissions still be halved in the next 10 years,” he said.

This week, countries will meet again for the Petersberg dialogue, a climate meeting held by the German government at which some EU countries may come forward with strengthened offers of climate finance to the developing world. Climate finance is regarded as essential to put poor countries on track to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and to cope with the impacts of climate breakdown, but so far offers from rich countries have fallen short of what experts say is needed.

THE GREEN INSTITUTE INC Succeeds in GlobalGiving's Accelerator, Becomes Recognized Partner of GlobalGiving

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THE GREEN INSTITUTE INC announced today that they have graduated from the GlobalGiving Accelerator program, gaining entry into the GlobalGiving marketplace and becoming a recognized partner of GlobalGiving. As part of the Accelerator, THE GREEN INSTITUTE INC successfully raised $5,094 from 50 unique individual donors to support their project, "Support 30 young rural girls in Space Science."

"We're thrilled to have THE GREEN INSTITUTE INC as part of our community. THE GREEN INSTITUTE INC has met our rigorous vetting standards for trust and community support, and we're committed to providing tools, training, and support as they learn, grow and become more effective," said Alix Guerrier, CEO of GlobalGiving. "GlobalGiving donors value the opportunity to support nonprofits like THE GREEN INSTITUTE INC, knowing that they'll get regular updates about how their donations are put to work."

"The Girl Sustainability Prize (GSP) prepares thirty (30) young girls between the ages of 11-15 years old living in rural Nigeria to pursue education and careers in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields with an emphasis on Sustainability and Outer Space Exploration curriculum. In addition to providing access to innovative STEM education, GSP pays tuition fees for these girls to attend a private high school where they gather monthly to collaborate on science projects.", said Adenike Akinsemolu, project leader at THE GREEN INSTITUTE INC. "Visit our project, 'Support 30 young rural girls in Space Science' to learn how even $10 can make a difference: http://goto.gg/51555. We're $5,906 away from our overall goal of $11,000."

About THE GREEN INSTITUTE INC

Our mission is to build the next generation of sustainability leaders through Education, Advocacy and Innovation.

About GlobalGiving

GlobalGiving is a nonprofit that supports other nonprofits by connecting them to donor, companies, and nonprofits in nearly every country around the world. GlobalGiving makes it possible for local organizations to access the funding, tools, training, and support they need to become more effective and make the world a better place. Any registered nonprofit is welcome to apply for the GlobalGiving Accelerator Program: GlobalGiving.org/accelerator/

World Day for Safety & Health 2021: ‘Anticipate, Prepare, Respond’

The Green Institute

The International Labour Organisation released its clarion call for the World Day for Safety and Health 2021- “anticipate, prepare, and respond to crises and invest now in resilient Occupational Health Systems.”

‘Occupational heath hazards,’ or more generally, ‘the hurdles that the workers face in the courseof their employment by virtue or nature of the work they are indulged in,’ are gaining prominence widely in today’s times. The theme is a lush garden that has sundry fragrances. While some travellers herein might get carried to the dark days of industrial revolutionwhen the workers staunchly protested against the undue wage cuts, the others might be reminded of tired and battered professionals putting their best foot forward in the present pandemic. The background becomes blurry with the reverberated voices of the women in Civil Rights Movement demanding gender parity. Turning away, flashing scenes of health professionals pulling back at their hair drenched with sweat.

The pandemic has plummeted the world economy. The social setup has been endangered and the geopolitics is either witnessing one of the most advancing, or the most challenging discourse ever in the world history. The resilience to protect the workers against occupational health hazards is the most required right now. Even though all the countries have certain legislations in place to regulate the safety of the employed people, are those enough?

The Occupational Health System was formed originally to maintain the safety, health, and welfare of the people involved at a workplace. With the passage of time, the sphere enlarged so as to include the general public within its ambit as well (as the common law developed with the understanding that ‘the companies are responsible to the societies they grow in’). The International Labour Organisation Occupational Health Services Convention (No. 162) addresses “occupational health services” as “services entrusted with essentially preventive functions and responsible for advising the employer, the workers and their representatives in the undertaking on the requirements for establishing and maintaining a safe and healthy working environment which will facilitate optimal physical and mental health in relation to work and the adaptation of work to the capabilities of workers in the light of their state of physical and mental health.”[1]

There is a universal requirement to amplify the coverage of OHS around the world. Workers’ access to services must not be seen as an expenditure, but as an investment made with due cost-effectiveness. This was a policy shift that was mainly witnessed in the 1970s and 1980s. As a result, many international instruments gained momentum in aspiration of a common goal, including the Improvement of Working Conditions and Environment (PIACT), 1976, the International Labour Organisation Occupational Safety and Health Convention, 1981, the International Labour Organisation Occupational Health Services Convention, 1985, inter alia. By May 1995, 40 ratifications were entered into, whose ideal focus was an improvisation of:

The occupational health (and safety) of all workers in developed and developing economies alike,

Establishment of infrastructure for carrying out occupational health practice through laws and agreements,

Development of a liability system for the governments, employers’ organization, in collaboration with the workers’ organizations,

Development of a work environment that minimizes the occupational health hazards.

The same principles were reiterated in the terms of “right to lead healthy and productive lives in harmony with nature,” when Agenda 21 made the advent in the world striving towards sustainable development.

However, in reality, the OHS schemes are daunted by multitudinous hurdles. The most inadvertent challenge is that many OHS laws placed in various parts of the world are still archaic. These out-of-date provisions do not only offer inadequate justice to the employees of the organization but also leave gray area for the corporates to mismanage and oppress their rights for maximization of profits. Even at places where the laws are fairly adept, the work inspectors have a toxic lax attitude.  Due to the inactivity of the bureaucracy, the safety systems in these nations have been functioning in a vacuum.

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From their formulation to prioritizing, strategizing, and application, the stakeholders in OHS are many, including the employers’ organizations and the employees’ organizations, coupled with autonomous organizations, the public, etc. Yet so, the end goal is the attainment of the standard benchmark which would help the nations achieve their ideal social justice in due proportion with the economic growth. Truth be told, the employee welfare schemes have, at least until the day, not attained the status that they should have. In the attainment of Corporate Social Responsibility objectives and compliance, the corporates, in their defense, find it legitimate to lose their resources enough to spare any for the employees at the desired level. They could be right, maybe. But the question to be determined is, are they being fair?

REFERENCES

  1. JormaRantanen& Igor A. Fedotov, “Standards, Principles, and Approaches in Occupational Health Services,” available athttp://www.ilocis.org/documents/chpt16e.htm (Last accessed on April 28th, 2021).

Biden's remarkable success on climate

Jeffrey Sachs
Opinion

Jeffrey Sachs

Jeffrey Sachs

By every standard, President Joe Biden's climate change summit was a remarkable success. With great diplomatic dexterity, Biden and climate envoy John Kerry assembled world leaders representing 82% of world carbon emissions, 73% of the world population and 86% of world economic output to commit to bold climate action.

Biden deftly used the occasion to set the US economy on the path of bold decarbonization by 2030. And all of this was accomplished by videoconference, a daily act for schoolchildren and office workers, yet a much-needed breakthrough for a gathering of world leaders.

The summit represents a tipping point. The world's largest economies -- the United States, Canada, the European Union, China, Japan, Korea, India, United Kingdom, Brazil -- are finally aligning around the goal of deep decarbonization, meaning the shift of the energy system from fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas) to zero-carbon sources (solar, wind, hydro, geothermal, biomass and nuclear).

Cynics might claim that we've been here before -- big political talk about climate action but with little prospect of follow up. Yet such cynicism is not well placed. The stark dangers of a warming planet, coupled with the breakthroughs in low-cost, zero-carbon technologies, are convincing political and business leaders not to be left behind in the great global energy transformation already underway.

It's a powerful signal of this new energy consensus that electric vehicle producer Tesla has a $690 billion market capitalization, more than eight times General Motors' $82 billion market capitalization. Any country that delays decarbonizing will be left with stranded assets and shrinking markets for its exports.

We are still a long way from achieving this goal, but the debates over the objective -- net-zero greenhouse gas emissions, the timing (by around 2050), and even the basic pathways to success -- are largely over.

The key reasons for the new geopolitical consensus are clear. Earth has already warmed dangerously -- by around 1.2° Celsius, or 2.7° Fahrenheit over the past 250 years -- and will continue to warm at around 0.2° C per decade or higher unless the global energy system is decarbonized.

Yet rapid decarbonization is now feasible at low cost thanks to remarkable technological advances in solar and wind power, battery storage, electric vehicles and more. Even better for the economy, the green (low-carbon) economy will produce a lot more jobs in the rising clean energy sectors than will be cut in the declining fossil fuel sectors.

All governments are to make long-term pledges on decarbonization at a global summit this November in Glasgow. Biden's meeting of 40 leaders was a prelude to the that gathering, which will include all 193 United Nations member states. The message from the White House meeting to the 150 or so governments not present is crystal clear: Prepare to arrive in Glasgow (in person or perhaps online) with plans for a clear pathway to net-zero emissions by mid-century.

There is a crucial engineering backdrop to the strong consensus that was on display at the White House gathering. Governments are doing their technical homework. Lo and behold, they are finding that decarbonizing the energy system is not some pie-in-the-sky dream, but is rather a practical and achievable task, with six basic steps in the transformation:

First, stop building any new fossil fuel-based power generation (such as coal-fired power plants) and replace all mothballed power plants and new generation capacity with zero-carbon power (such as wind, solar, nuclear, etc.).

Second, electrify transport. All of today's automakers and many aspiring automakers of the future know that the automotive future lies in electric vehicles. Major auto producers will shift fully from internal combustion engines to battery electric vehicles by around 2035.

Third, electrify buildings. New buildings will be fit with electric heat pumps and electric cooking, and old buildings heated with home heating oil and natural gas will be retrofitted for electricity.

Fourth, improve energy efficiency through smart appliances, improved building design, better materials and other cost-effective energy savers.

Fifth, produce "green" fuels such as hydrogen using zero-carbon electricity for use in industrial applications that can't be electrified directly. Hydrogen or other zero-carbon fuels will be used in sectors such as aviation, ocean shipping and steel production.

Sixth, adopt nature-based solutions to store more carbon dioxide in forests and soils by creating more protected nature reserves and by shifting from extensive (land-using) agriculture to intensive (land-saving) agriculture.

The various commitments announced at the White House meeting follow these six basic steps. The US pledge to cut emissions by half by 2030 is based especially on the first step: to shift decisively to zero-carbon electricity this decade, taking account of the plummeting costs of zero-carbon power generation in the US.

Biden's infrastructure plans also invest in other steps. For example, they support the transition to electric vehicles through investments in charging stations and R&D for advances in battery technology.

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro did a U-turn at the White House. After long parroting Trump's anti-environmentalism, Bolsonaro abruptly fell in behind Biden by announcing Brazil's intention to reach net-zero emissions by 2050 and to scale-up nature-based solutions in Brazil's vast Amazon rainforest.

Chinese President Xi Jinping not only underscored China's commitment to reach net-zero emissions by 2060, but also to draw down coal use after 2025, a major step forward, and one that will likely put China on the path to reach net zero by 2050, alongside the US.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi both promised climate action but offered few new details. Russia is of course heavily dependent on fossil fuels, yet Putin knows that Russia needs to change as foreign markets for Russia's gas exports inevitably decline. India is still coal dependent, yet the Indian government recognizes India's vast solar power potential, its high vulnerability to global warming and the serious risks of losing export markets if India delays its energy transformation.

Cooperation beats Cold Wars. A few more Zooms by world leaders and who knows what they might accomplish to build a safer, fairer and more sustainable world.

Senate Reinstates Obama-Era Controls on Climate-Warming Methane

Coral Davenport

Senate Democrats on Wednesday deployed a once-obscure law to resurrect Obama-era regulations on methane that the Trump administration had wiped away.

WASHINGTON — The Senate voted on Wednesday to effectively reinstate an Obama-era regulation designed to clamp down on emissions of methane, a powerful, climate-warming pollutant that will have to be controlled to meet President Biden’s ambitious climate change promises.

Taking a page from congressional Republicans who in 2017 made liberal use of a once-obscure law to roll back Obama-era regulations, Democrats invoked the law to turn back a Trump methane rule enacted late last summer. That rule had eliminated Obama-era controls on leaks of methane, which seeps from oil and gas wells.

The 52-42 vote was the first time congressional Democrats have used the law, called the Congressional Review Act, which prohibits Senate filibusters and ensures one administration’s last-minute regulations can be swiftly overturned with a simple majority vote in both chambers of Congress. Three Republican senators — Susan Collins of Maine, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Rob Portman of Ohio — joined Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents to vote for the measure.

Passage of the measure in the House next month is considered pro forma, as is Mr. Biden’s signature. And with Donald J. Trump’s regulation out of the way, the Obama methane rule would go back into force.

That rule, released in 2016, had imposed the first federal limits on methane leaks from oil and gas wells, requiring companies to monitor, plug and capture leaks of methane from new drilling sites.

Mr. Biden has vowed to place climate change at the top of his agenda. He rejoined the Paris climate change agreement, assigned his cabinet heads to enact climate-friendly policies across the government, and included hundreds of billions of dollars in spending on renewable energy projects in an infrastructure package pending before Congress. Last week, Mr. Biden announced at a global climate summit that the United States would cut its greenhouse emissions by 50 percent from 2005 levels by 2030.

With the striking of the Trump methane rule, Democrats will have enacted the first legislative step toward that goal.

“Once the president signs it, this will be the first move by Congress and this administration to actually put climate policy back on the books,” said Dan Grossman, director of legislative and regulatory affairs at the Environmental Defense Fund, an advocacy group.

In a statement of support for the vote, the White House called methane “a potent climate-disrupting greenhouse gas that is responsible for approximately one-third of the global warming.”

The statement added that “addressing methane pollution” is “an urgent and essential step.”

The Congressional Review Act allows Congress to reverse any executive-branch rule within 60 legislative days of its enactment, but because the president can veto review act measures, the law can be effectively deployed only after a new administration takes control.

Republicans used the procedure to wipe out 14 late-term Obama administration rules in the first 16 weeks of the Trump administration, but Wednesday’s vote was the first time Democrats have used the procedure to undo the policy of a Republican administration. Democrats plan to use the procedure just once more in the coming weeks, before their window to do so expires in late May, with a vote to repeal a labor rule that had made it easier for employers to deny worker claims of employment discrimination.

Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the majority leader, called Wednesday’s vote “one of the most important votes, not only that this Congress has cast, but has been cast in the last decade, in terms of our fight against global warming.”

It will be more difficult for Democrats to push through broader climate change legislation — they will need to either muster enough votes from Republicans to reach the 60-vote majority required to overcome a filibuster, or to try to fold climate measures into a proposed infrastructure spending package, and hope they can use a budget rule that allows passage with 51 votes.

Still, Mr. Schumer noted that Wednesday’s vote represented a glimmer of bipartisanship on climate change. Mr. Graham, who has stood as a staunch ally of Mr. Trump, said of his vote to restore the methane rule, “I think it’s just unnecessary emissions that they can do something about, and they’ll need to do it.”

Most Republicans opposed the move to reinstate the regulation, but they were muted in their opposition to reining in methane pollution.

“More regulations are not the answer,” said Senator John Barrasso of Wyoming, the ranking Republican on the Senate Energy Committee. Mr. Barrasso noted that he had written legislation designed to reduce methane emissions by requiring additional permitting of natural gas pipelines. “Congress should advance solutions like my legislation — not relitigate regulatory fights from the past,” he said.

Senator Steve Daines, Republican of Montana, said, “We need policies that encourage continued innovation, not more bureaucratic regulation.”

Both the scientific understanding of the role that methane plays in driving climate change and the position of the oil and gas industry have shifted since Mr. Obama’s administration first sought to regulate methane pollution. Scientists now see the gas as playing a greater role in the rapid warming of the planet than previously understood, while some major oil and gas companies that fought methane regulations a decade ago now say they welcome, or at least can work with, the return of the methane rules.

Most of Mr. Biden’s proposed climate change policies are designed to reduce carbon dioxide, which is produced by burning fossil fuels and is the most abundant and damaging greenhouse gas.

Methane, which is a close second, is mainly emitted from leaks in oil and gas drilling sites. It lingers in the atmosphere for a shorter period of time than carbon dioxide, but packs a bigger punch while it lasts. By some estimates, methane has 80 times the heat-trapping power of carbon dioxide in its first 20 years in the atmosphere.

A new United Nations report, compiled by an international team of scientists and scheduled to be published next month, is expected to declare that reducing emissions of methane, the main component of natural gas, will need to play a far more vital role in warding off the worst effects of climate change.

The report, a detailed summary of which was viewed by The New York Times, also says that, unless there is significant deployment of unproven technologies capable of pulling greenhouse gases out of the air, expanding the use of natural gas is incompatible with keeping global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, a goal of the international Paris Agreement.

Many major oil and gas companies have come out in support of methane regulations: Exxon, Shell and BP had actually urged the Trump administration to keep the Obama methane rules in place. Those companies have invested millions of dollars to promote natural gas as a cleaner fuel than coal in the nation’s power plants, because natural gas produces about half as much carbon dioxide when burned. They fear that unrestricted leaks of methane could undermine that marketing message and hurt demand.

On Wednesday, Vicki Hollub, the chief executive of Occidental Petroleum, an international oil company based in Houston, told a Senate panel that she supported the vote to reinstate the methane regulations.

“We need to have regulation in place to ensure that we have adequate control throughout the industry,” she said.

Devon Energy, an Oklahoma-based natural gas producer, tweeted on Wednesday, “We believe a meaningful reduction in methane emissions is essential to managing the risks of climate change. While the Congressional Review Act is an extraordinary legislative tool that should be used judiciously and with caution, we support the ongoing effort in Congress to chart a path toward a durable framework for regulating methane at the federal level that encourages innovation and operational flexibility.”

Once the Obama methane rules are reinstated, Mr. Biden plans to go further: While the Obama rules require companies to monitor and control methane leaks from new drilling wells, Mr. Biden has directed his Environmental Protection Agency administrator, Michael Regan, to prepare new rules in the coming months that would also require companies to impose controls on methane leaks from existing oil and gas drilling sites.

That prospect raises concerns for small, independent oil companies, which fear that new rules requiring companies to install methane-leak control technology could be accommodated by large companies but could saddle small companies with costs they cannot afford.

“Our issue is not with the need to manage emissions,” said Lee Fuller, executive vice president of the Independent Petroleum Association of America. “The biggest impact of regulating existing sources will inevitably fall on low-production wells. That’s where the magnitude of the impact’s going to fall. So the question is, what is it going to look like?”

Mr. Fuller said his group intended to spend the coming months making the case to the Biden administration that the next round of methane rules should offer customized policies that differentiate between the giant oil production farms of companies like Shell and Exxon and the small, two- or three-well operations of independent wildcatters like his members.

“Our objective will be to try to make sure the regulatory process distinguishes between large and small wells with appropriate regulations for each,” he said.

Emily Cochrane contributed reporting.

World Day for Safety and Health at Work

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Workplace accidents and work-related health issues contribute to more than 2 million deaths per year worldwide, in addition to non-fatal incidents that affect human health in the long run. The emotional and physical well-being of the workers is predominantly dependent on their workplace surroundings where they spend most of their awake time. It is stressful to note that questions like –" Can you work effectively under stress?", "Can you meet unrealistic standards of perfection under pressure?" still pop up in every other job interview. It is disheartening to note that youth today take pride in admitting that they perform well under pressure, not realizing its serious impacts on their health. It is a sad plight that an average human has to be subjected to workplace stress and pressures just to earn a living.

As the world observed this year World Day for Safety and Health at Work, it is imperative to educate and empower ourselves with the right information to end this trend of unhealthy work life. 

Corporate Safety and health measures like no-smoke areas; wellness programs; health education; safety training; preventative care; ergonomic support; timely breaks; and healthcare and insurance facilities are a few steps towards the ultimate goal of a healthy workplace.

With a global pandemic glooming over us, mental health is one aspect of human well-being that is at greater risk in these times. The fear of the attack, incurring expenses and the dependency of the livelihoods of those dependent on them have added to the stress of workers around the world. It is crucial that investments into health care systems focusing on the mental health of the employees be taken up now. 

There are several health care models and systems that cater to the needs of a variety of businesses and workplaces. But a basic model should ideally include:

  1. Advice and exercise of preventative health care

  2. Regular workplace surveillance for health and periodic encouragement for health checkups.

  3. Emergency awareness and first- aid preparedness.

There are several advantages to investing in resilient health systems at the workplace. Firstly, it helps with employee productivity and engagement along with the reputation of the organization. It also leads to much lower work-related injuries and accidents. Secondly, with improved worker- productivity, the organization can have better revenue and profits and spend less on post-injury health care benefits for the workers. Finally, a physically and mentally healthy workplace is home to its workers who can contribute in ways beyond their responsibilities, and as a result, leading to businesses expand.

With greater awareness, a great deal of damage can be avoided and mitigated. 

Mass crematorium set up in India where 115 people are dying every hour

Tom Williams

Smoke from dozens of small fires can be seen billowing up from a makeshift crematorium in the Indian capital New Delhi, each representing a new death in the country’s Covid-19 crisis. With existing crematoriums overwhelmed, temporary facilities have had to be set up to burn the hundreds of virus victims currently dying every day in the struggling country. ‘People are just dying, dying and dying,’ said Jitender Singh Shanty, who is coordinating the cremation of around 100 bodies a day at the site in the east of the city. ‘If we get more bodies then we will cremate on the road. There is no more space here.’ Images showed smoke billowing from dozens of pyres lit inside a parking lot that has been turned into a temporary crematorium. The bright, glowing fires are burning all day and well into the night – lighting up the dark sky. Crematoriums are being forced to skip individual ceremonies and the exhaustive rituals that Hindus believe release the soul from the cycle of rebirth. ‘The virus is swallowing our city’s people like a monster,’ said Mamtesh Sharma, an official at Bhadbhada Vishram Ghat crematorium in Bhopal. ‘We are just burning bodies as they arrive. It is as if we are in the middle of a war.’

India recorded more than 320,000 new cases of coronavirus infection on Tuesday taking the total to 17.6 million, the highest toll of any country bar the United States. The health ministry also reported another 2,771 deaths in 24 hours, with roughly 115 Indians succumbing to the disease every hour. Meanwhile, the first shipments of foreign aid have begun arriving in the struggling country, including 100 ventilators and 95 oxygen concentrators sent by the UK.

A makeshift crematorium in the Indian captial of New Delhi – one of the areas hardest hit by the latest wave of Covid (Picture: Reuters)

A makeshift crematorium in the Indian captial of New Delhi – one of the areas hardest hit by the latest wave of Covid (Picture: Reuters)

India now has the second highest caseload in the world (Picture: Reuters)

India now has the second highest caseload in the world (Picture: Reuters)

Crematoriums have become overwhelmed by the scale of the tragedy (Picture: Getty)

Crematoriums have become overwhelmed by the scale of the tragedy (Picture: Getty)

Around 115 Indians are estimated to by dying every hour (Picture: Reuters)

Around 115 Indians are estimated to by dying every hour (Picture: Reuters)

Tuesday’s total ended India’s five-day streak of recording the largest single-day increases in any country throughout the pandemic, but the decline likely reflects lower weekend testing rather than reduced spread of the virus. Foreign ministry spokesman Arindam Bagchi tweeted photos on Tuesday of the first shipment of medical aid India has received. Other nations including the US, Germany, Israel, France and Pakistan have also promised medical aid to India. The countries have said they will supply oxygen, diagnostic tests, treatments, ventilators and protective gear to help India at a time of crisis which World Health Organisation chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Monday called ‘beyond heartbreaking’.

The health ministry reported another 2,771 deaths in 24 hours (Picture: Getty)

The health ministry reported another 2,771 deaths in 24 hours (Picture: Getty)

The first shipments of aid sent by the UK to India have arrived (Picture: Gov.uk)

The first shipments of aid sent by the UK to India have arrived (Picture: Gov.uk)

One worker said if there are more bodies, they will have to cremate on the road (Picture: Rex)

One worker said if there are more bodies, they will have to cremate on the road (Picture: Rex)

Other countries have also pledged to support India (Picture: Gov.uk)

Other countries have also pledged to support India (Picture: Gov.uk)

The surge, spurred by new variants of coronavirus, has undermined the Indian government’s premature claims of victory over the pandemic. The country of nearly 1.4 billion people is facing a chronic shortage of space on its intensive care wards. Hospitals are experiencing oxygen shortages and authorities have begun to treat people in train carriages due to a lack of beds. India has also started airlifting oxygen tankers to states in need. Special trains with oxygen supplies are also running in the country.

Activists fight to save 550-year-old oak threatened by new Shrewsbury road

Patrick Barkham

Objectors say relief road contradicts council’s net zero target and will damage local wildlife sites

A gathering of residents at the tree known as Darwin’s oak. Photograph: Jon Super/The Guardian

A gathering of residents at the tree known as Darwin’s oak. Photograph: Jon Super/The Guardian

A 550-year-old tree known as “Darwin’s oak”, 4km of hedgerows and an internationally-renowned wetland are threatened by a new road around Shrewsbury, which has gathered more than 1,000 formal objections.

The £84.3m Shrewsbury north-west relief road planned by Shropshire council is becoming a local election issue, with the Conservative-controlled council arguing that the scheme, which completes a ring-road around the medieval town, will alleviate traffic and unlock land for housing.

But a growing number of objectors to the application – which the council has submitted and its planning committee will determine after the May elections – say that the four-mile road, including a 668-metre-long viaduct over the River Severn, contradicts the council’s declaration of the climate emergency and net zero by 2030 target.

Opponents also argue that the road will ruin a “green wedge” of unspoilt valley beside Shrewsbury and say that the coronavirus pandemic has destroyed the business case for the road.

The oak is 550 years old, and may have been nejoyed by Charles Darwin. Photograph: Jon Super/The Guardian

The oak is 550 years old, and may have been nejoyed by Charles Darwin. Photograph: Jon Super/The Guardian

The road will pass within metres of four local wildlife sites, an ancient woodland and Hencott Pool, a Site of Special Scientific Interest, and the internationally important Ramsar wetland. Opponents say the road will damage these sites with nitrogen oxides and other atmospheric pollution, add noise pollution, be a visual eyesore and put Shrewsbury’s drinking water supplies at risk.

A protest walk on Sunday 18 April highlighted the road’s destruction of at least 29 irreplaceable “veteran” trees, including a 550-year-old oak that may have been enjoyed by Charles Darwin, who was born and raised in Shrewsbury.

When “T58 fell” was recently discovered spray-painted on the ancient oak’s trunk, anti-road campaigners believed it confirmed the council’s plans to destroy it. But the council says the paint marks were not made by it or any of its contractors.

Rob McBride, an ancient-tree advocate, said: “Standing under this tree was a moment where you think: ‘What are we doing to our planet?’ Councils are really lagging behind current thinking. Darwin may have sat under this tree and considered the evolution of man. The people making the decision on this road are dinosaurs.”

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Shropshire council said no decision had yet been taken on whether or not to fell the Darwin oak. The council is proposing to plant 345,000 new trees – one for every resident in Shropshire – as part of its action for climate change.

Mark Broomfield, an air quality consultant and author of Every Breath You Take, warned that if the council gave permission for the road it was vulnerable to legal challenge because of what he judged was an inadequate assessment of the air pollution impacts on Hencott Pool, which is protected under EU and UK law.

“If the council is not confident that there are no impacts, the regulations say they shall not approve it,” said Broomfield, a Shrewsbury resident who has objected to the scheme. “The road is a terrible solution to a problem that has much cheaper and less damaging solutions.”

Groups objecting to the road include Shropshire Wildlife Trust, CPRE (formerly the Campaign to Protect Rural England), Bicton parish council and Better Shrewsbury Transport. Shrewsbury’s Conservative MP, Daniel Kawczynski, has been a long-term supporter of the road.

According to Emma Bullard of Better Shrewsbury Transport, the council has pushed for the road for more than 30 years but never succeeded because it lacked central government funding until 2019, when a £54.4m grant materialised.

“It won’t work, it will be incredibly destructive in terms of wildlife and carbon and we can’t afford it,” she said. “It’s this ‘we need roads for growth’ idiocy. They say it will enable more walking and cycling in the town centre but without any proof. The project has acquired a hideous life of its own.”

Anti-road campaigners point out that Hereford recently cancelled their bypass after concluding that congestion could be alleviated by measures to promote walking, cycling and bus transport at a fraction of the cost.

Rob McBride protesting by Darwin’s oak. Photograph: Jon Super/The Guardian

Rob McBride protesting by Darwin’s oak. Photograph: Jon Super/The Guardian

The council must spend at least £17m – plus cost overruns – on the road, some of which will come from the community infrastructure levy, money collected from housing developers across the county.

Shropshire council’s leader, Peter Nutting, has said funding is “not an issue” because the project will open up about 55 acres of “prime development land” owned by the council which he said it can sell for about £500,000 an acre.

According to the council, it is “following current Department for Transport modelling requirements around business case development in traffic forecasting” and will re-run the numbers if this is reviewed post-Covid.

A council spokesperson said: “Increased local trips by public transport, walking and cycling may be a larger part of the post-Covid situation and the road will still facilitate this with reduced congestion in the town centre.”

A sign near Darwin’s oak. Photograph: Jon Super/The Guardian

A sign near Darwin’s oak. Photograph: Jon Super/The Guardian

Of the impacts on Hencott Pool, the council said the road had been moved south so the wetland was not considered an affected site in planning terms.

Of claims that the road contradicts the council’s net zero goal, the spokesperson said the road’s impact was accommodated within its wider carbon management and offsetting, and a full study would be published shortly.

The spokesperson added: “The Shrewsbury north-west relief road is currently being consulted upon as part of the planning application process and a decision is not expected until later in the year. In the meantime, we very much welcome the public’s views as part of that process.”

23 Construction Waste Statistics & Tips to Reduce Landfill Debris

Big Rentz Inc.

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Material waste is one of the most difficult factors to control in construction projects of all sizes. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) found that total waste from construction-related projects was double that of municipal waste from households and businesses in 2018—and the United States already produces the most household waste by volume of any country.

Although there isn’t a universal solution to solving the construction waste problem, many construction firms are finding innovative ways to reduce their contribution to the pileup. Methodologies like lean construction and value engineering aim to decrease waste in the planning stages, while post-planning construction services provide waste removal and disposal solutions.

Are we in too deep to dig ourselves out of this landfill? Many experts say no, but they still stress that the problem is worsening by the day. We’ve compiled a list of construction waste statistics not to smear dirt on the problem, but to highlight opportunities for the construction industry to improve. Read on to delve into the complexity of construction waste, or jump to our visual to get a quick rundown of some sustainable solutions.

Construction Waste and the Waste Stream

Construction and demolition, or C&D, debris is estimated to be nearly one-quarter of the national waste stream, which is the total waste generated in the United States in one year. Waste streams are used to monitor debris output by type. For example, the C&D waste stream measures concrete, asphalt, wood and other building wastes individually.

Not all countries approach their waste management efforts in the same way. In fact, some countries trade waste products like commodities, since the recycling and recovery process can generate thousands of local jobs. For example, the United Kingdom  exports several thousand tons of waste every year, but the country recycles approximately 90% of C&D waste.

Researchers use waste streams to forecast debris management strategies and shape trade regulations. China, a leading importer of foreign waste and recyclables, recently heavily limited the types of waste it will accept and the kinds of local businesses allowed to import that waste, causing headaches for countries that count on cash from waste exports.

Construction Waste Statistics: How Bad is It?

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Imports contribute to the national waste stream, but the problem is still homegrown. The U.S. produces too much trash overall, and the construction industry is a huge contributor. Waste generation is on the rise and expected to skyrocket in the near future. Here are some statistics on construction waste that might cause you to do a double-take the next time you see a landfill:

  • Annual construction waste is expected to reach 2.2 billion tons globally by 2025. (Transparency Market Research)

  • 23% of the national waste stream is estimated to be C&D waste. (BTS)

  • The U.S. generated over 600 million tons of construction-related waste in 2018. (EPA)

  • C&D waste generation in the U.S. increased by 342% from 1990 to 2018. (EPA)

  • Between 2005 and 2018, C&D waste levels grew more than 10x faster than from 1990 to 2005. (EPA)

Construction Waste Disposal Statistics

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The C&D waste stream records waste from concrete, asphalt concrete, wood, brick and clay tiles, gypsum drywall, asphalt shingles and metal. Some of these materials, like concrete and metal, are relatively cost-effective to recycle or repurpose. However, brick and clay tiles and gypsum drywall are much less reusable, therefore ending up in landfills in much higher quantities.

Check out these construction waste disposal statistics:

  • As much as 30% of all building materials delivered to a typical construction site can end up as waste. (ScienceDirect)

  • Construction and demolition projects filled U.S. landfills with almost 145 million tons of waste in 2018. (EPA)

  • More than 75% of all construction waste from wood, drywall, asphalt shingles, bricks and clay tiles ends up in landfills. (EPA)

  • Concrete and asphalt concrete made up 85% of all U.S. C&D waste in 2018. (EPA)

  • C&D waste and municipal solid waste (MSW) went to landfills in nearly equal amounts in 2018, despite total C&D waste outnumbering MSW levels 2-to-1. (EPA)

Building Demolition Statistics

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The science behind building demolition is complicated and fascinating. Generally, demolition projects contribute significantly more waste than new construction projects. Buildings can be demolished in several ways, but some ways are more prone to material recycling than others. These building demolition statistics show just how explosive the process can be:

  • In 2018 alone, demolitions added 567 million tons of debris to the national waste stream. (EPA)

  • Demolition of roads and bridges accounted for 43% more debris than building demolition in 2015. (EPA)

  • A 2016 study found that among more than 50,000 analyzed demolitions, 47% were to make way for new construction. (Tampere University of Technology)

  • Concrete has one of the longest useful lives among building materials, but concrete structures account for the most demolition projects by far. (Tampere University of Technology)

  • Adaptive reuse projects result in more positive environmental, social and governance metrics (like energy usage and social justice) than building demolitions. (Tampere University of Technology)

Recycled Construction Materials Statistics

There is a lot of treasure to behold among all the trash and debris. Sustainable efforts help the construction industry recover the majority of its waste—over three-quarters of it, in fact—for reuse. Recycling is responsible for more than 85% of waste management jobs despite the fact that the U.S. recycles only a third of its total waste output.

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Reduce your waste-related stress with these recycled construction materials statistics:

  • New construction contributed just 5.5% of all U.S. C&D waste in 2018. (EPA)

  • In 2018, 76% of all C&D waste in the U.S. was recovered or recycled. (EPA)

  • Over 95% of concrete and asphalt concrete waste, the largest contributors to total C&D waste, was recovered in 2018. (EPA)

  • A 2016 study showed that in one year alone, C&D recycling opportunities led to the creation of 175,000 U.S. jobs. (EPA)

  • Over 650 million tons of steel are recycled each year across the globe. (WSA)

  • 98% of steel in construction and demolition projects is recycled to new uses. (AISC)

  • Jobs created by recycling and reuse outnumber traditional waste disposal jobs 9-to-1. (NRDC)

  • Recycling efforts can reduce U.S. landfill expansion by 1,000 acres for every 135 million tons of C&D waste recovered. (CDRA)

How to Make a Construction Waste Management Plan

Waste management is a key focus for companies planning new offices as they look to build healthy buildings that benefit their occupants. Tools like blockchain technology and Building Information Modeling (BIM) software allow companies to monitor supply chains and make recovery and recycling plans for assets nearing the end of their useful life.

Waste management not only involves installing efficient waste treatment facilities and recycling destinations but also monitoring construction waste during the building process. California, home to more landfills than any other state, uses a comprehensive strategy called CalRecycle to aid its efforts to lead the nation in waste recovery and recycling-related job creation.

Sustainable initiatives encourage new uses for recyclable materials in construction. After all, reducing, reusing and recycling are not just fun activities for kids to encourage recycling. Reduced material waste, adaptive reuse projects and recycled building materials are powerful allies in chipping away at the long-term goal of zero-waste construction.

1. Don’t Start from Scratch

Adaptive reuse is a booming construction industry trend that transforms structures no longer in use into something new. From a building perspective, adaptive reuse can be a cost-effective option because the development of a new construction site isn’t necessary. From a recycling standpoint, adaptive reuse projects minimize demolition and therefore contribute less waste than other projects.

2. Use Recycled (and Recyclable) Materials

Most construction projects already heavily use recycled materials, even by accident. Steel, one of the most common building materials in the world, is made of 93% recycled steel scrap, while asphalt concrete is now nearly 100% recyclable. “Material banks” that store recycled building materials for later use are making it even easier to access sustainable supplies.

3. Reduce Supplies Altogether

BIM allows designers to create a virtual model of a building that acts as a digital record of materials down to the number of doorknobs used and how they were installed. This information helps plan how to salvage materials when their useful life ends, as well as forecast exact amounts needed to eliminate excess supply waste.

A Clean Future With Reduced Waste

Construction waste won’t be an easy mess to clean up. Unfortunately, avoidable waste is often caused by inaccurate estimates in orders or incorrect material cuts that result in unusable scraps. Demolition waste accounts for almost 95% of C&D waste, much of which is unavoidable considering destructive demolition methods like explosives.

Although the construction industry contributes a quarter of the country’s annual waste generation, the industry is already doing an incredible job of recovering building materials. By using recycled materials and smart asset management systems, and by avoiding demolition projects via adaptive reuse, construction companies are paving the way for a zero-waste future.

Climate change link to displacement of most vulnerable is clear: UNHCR

UN NEWS

Weather-related crises have triggered more than twice as much displacement as conflict and violence in the last decade, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said on Thursday.

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Coinciding with Earth Day on Thursday 22 April, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, UNHCR, published data showing how disasters linked to climate change likely worsen poverty, hunger and access to natural resources, stoking instability and violence.

“From Afghanistan to Central America, droughts, flooding, and other extreme weather events are hitting those least equipped to recover and adapt”, said the UN agency, which is calling for countries to work together to combat climate change and mitigate its impact on hundreds of millions of people.

Since 2010, weather emergencies have forced around 21.5 million people a year to move, on average.

Home countries worst hit

UNHCR said that roughly 90 per cent of refugees come from countries that are the most vulnerable and least ready to adapt to the impacts of climate change.

These countries also host around 70 per cent of people internally displaced by conflict or violence.

Citing the case of Afghanistan, UNHCR noted that it is one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world, as nearly all of its 34 provinces have been hit by at least one disaster in the past 30 years.

The country is also ranked the least peaceful globally, owing to longstanding conflict that has killed and injured thousands of people and displaced millions.

Chronic floods, droughts

Recurring floods and droughts – along with population growth - have compounded food insecurity and water scarcity and reduced the prospects of refugees and IDPs being able to return to their home areas, UNHCR said.

It pointed to indications that 16.9 million Afghans – nearly half of the country’s population - lacked enough food in the first quarter of 2021, including at least 5.5 million facing emergency levels of food deprivation.

As of mid-2020, more than 2.6 million Afghans were internally displaced and another 2.7 million were living as registered refugees in other countries, mainly Pakistan and Iran, according to UNHCR.

Mozambique is experiencing a similar confluence of conflict and multiple disasters, says the agency, with one cyclone after another battering the country’s central region while increasing violence and turmoil to the north displaces hundreds of thousands of people.

Hosts hit too

Many of the countries most exposed to the impacts of climate change are already host to large numbers of refugees and internally displaced.

In Bangladesh, more than 870,000 Rohingya refugees who fled violence in Myanmar are now exposed to increasingly frequent and intense cyclones and flooding. 

“We need to invest now in preparedness to mitigate future protection needs and prevent further climate caused displacement,” said UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi, earlier this year.

As a megadrought persists, new projections show a key Colorado River reservoir could sink to a record low later this year

Drew Kann & Renée Rigdon (Graphic)

Wracked by drought, climate change and overuse, a key reservoir on the Colorado River could sink to historically low levels later this year, new US government projections show, potentially triggering significant water cutbacks in some states as early as next year.

The projections released by the US Bureau of Reclamation show that Lake Mead -- the largest reservoir in the country and a vital water supply to millions across the Southwest -- could fall later this year to its lowest levels since it was filled in the 1930s.

The USBR will release its next major study in August. If that study projects water levels in the lake will be below the critical threshold of 1,075 feet on January 1, 2022, some users would begin to see their water deliveries cut significantly next year.

The cutbacks would be triggered based on the terms of drought contingency plans signed by the seven Colorado River Basin states in 2019 in an effort to stabilize the river system.

Lake Mead, the country's largest reservoir and a key water source for millions across the western US, could sink later this year to its lowest level since it was filled decades ago.

Despite the agreements, Lake Mead sits at just 39% full today. And Lake Powell, the river's second-largest reservoir, is just 36% full, according to an April water supply report.

The reservoirs along the river system were created to serve as a buffer to store water and ensure a reliable supply even in times of drought. But experts say that due to climate change and a 20-year drought, there is now more water being taken out of the river system than flowing into it, leading levels in these key reservoirs to fall.

"This shows us that the kind of dire scenarios that we've been preparing for and hoping would not happen are here now," said John Fleck, the director of the University of New Mexico's Water Resources Program.

The Colorado River provides water to 40 million people living in seven western states and Mexico, and irrigates more than 5 million acres of farmland as it snakes its way from the Rocky Mountains toward the Gulf of California.

The water delivery reductions that could take effect next year would be felt in Arizona, Nevada and Mexico, but Arizona would be hit hardest by the cutbacks, according to the terms of the drought contingency plan signed by those three states, which comprise the lower basin. The upper basin states of Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and New Mexico agreed to a separate plan that calls for voluntary water conservation measures to keep Lake Powell from also reaching critically low levels.

As part of the lower basin's drought contingency plan, the Central Arizona Project -- a massive, 336-mile canal and pipeline system that carries Colorado River water to Phoenix, Tucson and farms and towns in between -- would see its water supply slashed by about one third in 2022 due to its junior rights to the river's water.

The effects of those water cuts will be felt most acutely on farms in central Arizona, due to their lower priority status in a complex tier system used to determine who loses water first in the event of a shortage.

The Central Arizona Project canal runs through rural desert near Phoenix. Some farmers who receive Colorado River water from the Central Arizona Project could see their deliveries cut sharply as soon as next year.

In a joint statement last Thursday, the Arizona Department of Water Resources and the CAP acknowledged the new projections and looming cuts, but said the state is prepared.

"The study, while significant, is not a surprise," the statement reads. "We are prepared for these conditions, thanks in large part to Arizona's unique collaborative efforts among water leaders including tribes, cities, agriculture, industry and environmental organizations that developed innovative conservation and mitigation programs as part of the implementation of the Drought Contingency Plan. "

One of the farmers who stands to see his water deliveries reduced is Dan Thelander. Along with his son, brother and nephew, Thelander grows cotton, alfalfa and other crops on 6,500 acres in the desert of Pinal County, Arizona.

With less water expected to be available to him next year, Thelander said he will likely have to fallow, or leave unsown, 30 to 40% of his land.

Dan Thelander farms cotton, alfalfa and other crops in the desert of Pinal County, Arizona. He, along with other farmers in the region, stand to see their supply of Colorado River water cut significantly as soon as next year.

"We'll have to lay off employees. We won't be buying as many seeds or fertilizer or tractors, and so we'll just have to scale down and operate a smaller farm," Thelander said. "And so, yes, it'll hurt a lot."

Many farmers in Central Arizona like Thelander have known for years that their supply of Colorado River water would eventually be phased out.

As part of a 2004 settlement between the federal government and the Central Arizona Project over debt issues, farmers in some Central Arizona irrigation districts agreed to relinquish their water rights in exchange for receiving water at a reduced cost through the year 2030.

But with Lake Mead's water levels still near record lows and projected to fall further, deliveries of that water could end years before the farmers had expected.

Many factors contribute to the Colorado River system's dwindling supply.

For one, experts say there is more water being diverted out of the river than is coming into the system.

The Colorado River wraps around Horseshoe Bend near Page, Arizona. A study last year found that the river's flows have decreased by about 20% over the last century, due in large part to climate change.

"It's a math problem -- Lake Mead normally releases 10.2 million acre-feet of water per year, and 9 million acre-feet flow into it," said Brad Udall, a senior water and climate research scientist at Colorado State University. "At some point, because you have a 1.2 million acre-foot deficit each year, you've got to solve it or you'll drain the reservoir."

On top of that structural deficit, a historic drought and climate change are also sapping the river's supply.

Much of the Colorado River Basin has been gripped for the last two decades by what some scientists have dubbed a megadrought.

The period from 2000 to 2018 was the driest 19-year stretch the southwestern United States has experienced since the 1500s, according to an analysis of tree ring data published in the journal Science in 2020. The scientists also found that the human-caused climate crisis can be blamed for nearly half of the drought's severity.

Another study by US Geological Survey scientists published in 2020 found that the Colorado River's flow has declined by about 20% over the last century and that over half of that decline can be attributed to warming temperatures across the basin.

Most of the river's flow comes from snow that falls high in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado and southern Wyoming, said Chris Milly, a research hydrologist with the US Geological Survey and a co-author of the study.

Warming temperatures are leading to a decline in snowfall and an earlier snowmelt. But as the snow melts earlier and leaves behind bare ground, more heat energy from the sun is absorbed by the exposed soil. The warmer ground leads to more evaporation, which means less runoff from melting snow ends up in the river, Milly said.

"Evaporation is how the river basin cools itself," Milly said. "And so when you have more evaporation, you have less water left over to come down the river."

Current conditions also do not look promising for the kind of above-average runoff that is needed this year to begin to refill the river's key reservoirs.

After an exceptionally hot and dry 2020, precipitation has continued to lag well below normal for much of the basin.

Soil moisture levels across the region are also among the lowest on record, according to Paul Miller, a service coordination hydrologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)'s Colorado Basin River Forecast Center.

This means that much of the snowmelt runoff over the summer is likely to be absorbed by thirsty soils and plants before it can even reach the river, Miller said.

To Fleck, all of this signals that the reduced flows in recent years are likely not an aberration, but rather a glimpse of the challenges posed by a hotter, drier climate.

"We're now seeing the model for what the future of Colorado River Basin water use looks like, where scarcity is the norm and drought is not some special short-term thing," he said. "This is the way of life we're in now with climate change reducing the flow on the river."

Carbon emissions to soar in 2021 by second highest rate in history

Fiona Harvey

A coal power station in the US, where Joe Biden is considering measures to speed the move to renewable energy. Photograph: J David Ake/AP

A coal power station in the US, where Joe Biden is considering measures to speed the move to renewable energy. Photograph: J David Ake/AP

Global economies forecast to pour stimulus money into fossil fuels as part of Covid recovery

Carbon dioxide emissions are forecast to jump this year by the second biggest annual rise in history, as global economies pour stimulus cash into fossil fuels in the recovery from the Covid-19 recession.

The leap will be second only to the massive rebound 10 years ago after the financial crisis, and will put climate hopes out of reach unless governments act quickly, the International Energy Agency has warned.

Surging use of coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel, for electricity is largely driving the emissions rise, especially across Asia but also in the US. Coal’s rebound causes particular concern because it comes despite plunging prices for renewable energy, which is now cheaper than coal.

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Speaking exclusively to the Guardian, Fatih Birol, the executive director of the IEA, and one of the world’s leading authorities on energy and climate, said: “This is shocking and very disturbing. On the one hand, governments today are saying climate change is their priority. But on the other hand, we are seeing the second biggest emissions rise in history. It is really disappointing.”

Emissions need to be cut by 45% this decade, if the world is to limit global heating to 1.5C (2.7F), scientists have warned. That means the 2020s must be the decade when the world changes course, before the level of carbon in the atmosphere rises too high to avoid dangerous levels of heating. But the scale of the current emissions rebound from the Covid-19 crisis means “our starting point is definitely not a good one”, said Birol.

Birol compared the current surge of emissions to the financial crisis, when emissions rose by more than 6% in 2010 after countries tried to stimulate their economies through cheap fossil fuel energy. “It seems we are back on course to repeat the same mistakes,” he warned. “I am more disappointed this time than in 2010.”

Emissions plunged by a record 7% globally last year, owing to the lockdowns that followed the Covid-19 outbreak. But by the end of the year, they were already rebounding, and on track to exceed 2019 levels in some areas.

The IEA’s projections for 2021 show emissions are likely to end this year still down slightly on 2019 levels, but on a rising path. Next year there could be even stronger rises as air travel returns, Birol added. Aviation would normally contribute more than 2% of global emissions, but has been almost absent this past year.

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He called on governments to bring forward new climate policies urgently and seek a green recovery from the Covid-19 crisis. “Last year, I expressed my hope that the economic recovery from Covid-19 should be green and sustainable. But these numbers indicate that this recovery is currently anything but sustainable for our climate,” he said.

The US president, Joe Biden, is convening a climate summit this week, with the leaders of 40 countries expected to attend, at which he will urge countries to come forward with strong commitments on cutting emissions this decade. Birol said this was an opportunity for countries to change course and put policies in place for a green recovery.

“If governments take clear and imminent action, with the amount of cheap clean energy technologies we have, we can transform this disappointment to some good outcomes,” he said.

He called on governments to bring forward new climate policies urgently and seek a green recovery from the Covid-19 crisis. “Last year, I expressed my hope that the economic recovery from Covid-19 should be green and sustainable. But these numbers indicate that this recovery is currently anything but sustainable for our climate,” he said.

The US president, Joe Biden, is convening a climate summit this week, with the leaders of 40 countries expected to attend, at which he will urge countries to come forward with strong commitments on cutting emissions this decade. Birol said this was an opportunity for countries to change course and put policies in place for a green recovery.

“If governments take clear and imminent action, with the amount of cheap clean energy technologies we have, we can transform this disappointment to some good outcomes,” he said.

The IEA is considered the global gold standard for energy data, and its projections for 2021 are based on comprehensive soundings from around the world, including data from existing energy sources and new plants scheduled to come onstream. Energy data from the end of last year showed fossil fuels ahead of 2019 levels, and the surge has continued in the first part of this year.

ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION: A journey for future stability

The Green Institute 

Through evolution, man has been occupying more and more land to live and grow food, and with the gradual increase of the population and the industrial revolution, which has lead to more activities and consequently the degradation of ecosystems. The increase in temperature on land has led to a devastating loss of important habitats of different species, which are fundamental places for the feeding, reproduction, and survival of animals.

What are Ecosystems?

Ecosystems encompass a variety of population species together with their abiotic components that interact in complex ways. For example, the hilly regions, the people of that area, flora and fauna found on the hills, the water sources like brooks and streams, and so on all form a mountain ecosystem. All these components interact with each other for symbiotic survival, which means a drop in the population of one species or component will likely destroy the fragile balance of the entire ecosystem and lead to migration or loss of other species and/or components. Ecosystems and their processes are characterized by their population growth, resilience to externally induced changes, and restoration capabilities. While most ecosystems are subject to changes over time, if the changes repeatedly target the destruction of biodiversity, the ecosystems may not be able to repair or restore their functions and populations.

Why is there a need for ecosystem restoration?

It is a matter of concern for all the ecosystems as anthropogenically introduced changes jeopardize the ecosystem's functionality as a whole. When we talk about the functionality of an ecosystem, we practically mean the derivable services from the ecosystem. With the rise in the human population and the resulting activities, nearly two-thirds of the world’s ecosystems have been impacted in the last 50 years, causing severe implications on the lives of those dependent on them. Ecosystem restoration is needed for the ecosystems to maintain a fragile balance where they can sustain themselves and provide meaningful services to their inhabitants – food and livelihood security in specific. However, there are other services like reduction of global temperatures, restoring the water tables, mitigating climate change, etc., that make ecosystem restoration important in our discussion today.

How does ecosystem restoration help us?

With the rise in demand for resources, industrialization, and imbalances in economies, the world today needs more resources and mutually interactive ecosystems with various species to cater to the needs of its rising population. Ecosystem balance does not only help in providing sustenance to its inhabitants but also provides a variety of goods and services that form the core of any economic activity and contribute significantly to human welfare. It can provide livelihoods and satiate hunger to many and also uplift those dependent on natural resource-based livelihoods from poverty.

What are other notable services from ecosystems?

These are a few services that ecosystems provide.

  1.  Directly consumable Services – Example: timber, wood from forest ecosystems, or seafood from pond ecosystems.

  2. Indirectly consumable Services – Example:  Carbon sequestration, waste absorption, nutrient cycling, soil formation, etc., from forest ecosystems.

  3. Existence Services – Example: Aesthetic value of grassland ecosystems for tourism revenue.

 

Why has ecosystem restoration not gained significance in the past?

Ecosystem services have not been carefully regarded in policy and decision making in the past as there is little to no monetary value attached to them unlike other goods and services in the market. They were expected to be free and limitless.  Without an economic value, policy and decision-making have not reflected on ecosystems, their needs, and restoration in-depth, and thus ecosystems have been prone to further exploitation and deterioration.
However, on the optimistic side of things, this has gained significance in recent years, and policymakers are poised to refine the laws.

Are there any steps being taken by the world leaders towards restoration?

Fortunately, there is tremendous emphasis on restoration at the global front today. The United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2021-2030) is geared towards a harmonized balance in ecological, social, and developmental priorities in landscapes where different forms of land use interact. There are several other projects like the FERI (Forest Ecosystem Restoration Initiative) by the Korean forest service and the African-led Great Green Wall movement that aim towards integrating the local ecosystems to stabilize the livelihoods of the locals.

To better contextualize, the UN Decade Ecosystem Restoration has 3 main objectives:

  1. Enhancing global, regional, national & local commitments & actions to prevent, halt & reverse the degradation of ecosystems.

  2. Increasing our understanding of the multiple benefits of successful ecosystem restoration.

  3. Applying knowledge of ecosystem restoration in our education systems & within all public & private sector decision-making.

To achieve these objectives, several activities can be applied to contribute to the protection of ecosystems and to their repair.

  1. Enhancing organic carbon in agricultural soils;

  2. Increasing fish stocks in overfished zones;

  3. Remediating polluted sites;

  4. Restoring ecological processes;

  5. Restoring biodiversity;

  6. conserving fauna and flora.

 

Role of Entrepreneurs?

 In seeking to solve diverse global problems, entrepreneurship and small businesses are important to achieving these goals. Entrepreneurship has been increasingly driven by countries and large organizations, as entrepreneurship contributes significantly to innovations and new business opportunities, and consequently generating employment, reducing poverty, bringing quality of life, and generating socio-environmental impact.

The prior literature shows that entrepreneurship is increasingly recognized as a significant channel for bringing about a transformation to sustainable products and services and the implementation of new projects addressing various social and environmental concerns (DHAHRI, OMRI, 2018).

Sustainable entrepreneurship is one of the great solutions to preserving ecosystems, mitigating the effects of climate change, reducing environmental degradation, improving agricultural practices, providing quality water, and maintaining biodiversity

The role of entrepreneurship in attaining the sustainable development goals is emerging. Being an important subject of some debates in the recent few years, most international organizations, policy makers, and economists considered it a solution to promise the future development of society.

References

DHAHRI, Sabrine; OMRI, Anis. Entrepreneurship Contribution to the Three Pillars of Sustainable Development: What Does the Evidence Really Say? MPRA. Germany, p. 1-14. 17 jan. 2018. Available in: https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/84504/. Accessed in: 16 apr. 2021.

UNITED NATIONS. The United NationsDecade on Ecosystem Restoration. New York: United Nations, 2020. Available in: https://wedocs.unep.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.11822/31813/ERDStrat.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y. Accessed in: 16 apr. 2021.