| Headline |
Author |
Published |
Section |
Fund, Fund, Fund 'til Daddy Took the T-Note Away U.N. climate talks continue, but dissension rules the day |
|
13 Nov 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| Fund, Fund, Fund 'til Daddy Took the T-Note Away U.N. climate talks continue, but dissension rules the day As week two of the U.N. climate talks kicks off in Nairobi, Kenya, debate is raging over how to manage a fund that will help poorer countries adapt to climate change. Western countries want the $3 million fund -- which is expected to grow to $750 million -- to be run by a group allied with the World Bank. But developing ... |
|
| Topics: climate, news, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
In Toilets Is the Preservation of the World U.N. study illuminates deadly global water and sanitation situation |
|
10 Nov 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| In Toilets Is the Preservation of the World U.N. study illuminates deadly global water and sanitation situation Some say the world will end in fire, some say in ice -- but it's more likely to be lack of access to clean water that does us in. A U.N. report says dirty water is the second-leading cause of death among children around the world, causing 1.8 million wee ones under 5 to perish each year, and says that 2.6 bi ... |
|
| Topics: news, United Nations, water pollution (all these topics) |
|
|
A New Leaf Billion-tree effort launches as new climate reports issued |
|
09 Nov 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| A New Leaf Billion-tree effort launches as new climate reports issued Ooh, we love reports. A new one from a team of European scientists says the Arctic and Antarctic are linked by powerful currents, creating a "climate seesaw" that connects the fates of the poles and could help scientists predict the effects of polar warming on climate. A second, U.N.-commissioned re ... |
|
| Topics: Antarctica, Arctic, climate, Kenya, land stewardship, news, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
Do You Zaire What I Zaire? Africa already feeling effects of climate change, will be hit harder |
|
07 Nov 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| Do You Zaire What I Zaire? Africa already feeling effects of climate change, will be hit harder While some people question whether climate change is happening, many Africans are already beginning to feel its effects -- and, says a new U.N. report, the continent is at greater risk than previously thought. Some 480 million Africans could face water-security issues by 2025 and more than 70 million may be at risk from co ... |
|
| Topics: Africa, climate, news, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
You Can Call Them Algae Marine 'dead zones' on the rise around the world |
|
20 Oct 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| You Can Call Them Algae Marine "dead zones" on the rise around the world There are now at least 200 oxygen-starved "dead zones" in the world's seas and oceans, a rise of more than a third over the past two years, the United Nations Environment Program announced yesterday. The algae blooms that suck up oxygen and cause dead zones -- killing off or driving out fish, oysters, sea gra ... |
|
| Topics: marine life, news, pollution and waste, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
The Amazing Technicolor Dream Cote Ivory Coast scandal highlights illegal dumping of toxic waste |
|
28 Sep 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| The Amazing Technicolor Dream Cote Ivory Coast scandal highlights illegal dumping of toxic waste The recent dumping of toxic oil byproducts and subsequent deaths of eight citizens in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, has highlighted the shady world of illegal toxic-waste disposal. The practice of unloading nasties on developing countries was addressed by the U.N.'s Basel Convention in 1989 (you remember that one), ... |
|
| Topics: Africa, globalization, news, toxics, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
Aquaculture Shock Farmed-fish supply rises, but still may not match demand |
|
05 Sep 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| Aquaculture Shock Farmed-fish supply rises, but still may not match demand Farmed fish have nearly caught up to wild-caught fish as a source of the world's seafood, reported the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization yesterday. In 1980, just 9 percent of human-consumed fish came from aquaculture; now the number is 43 percent. "Catches in the wild are still high, but they have leveled off, probably for good," say ... |
|
| Topics: marine life, news, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
Waves of Mutilation Oceans are in deep trouble, says U.N. |
|
19 Jun 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| Waves of Mutilation Oceans are in deep trouble, says U.N. Human exploitation of the oceans has outpaced conservation efforts, the United Nations said Friday. It warned that ocean degradation is "rapidly passing the point of no return." The watery deep, home to more than 90 percent of living organisms, faces danger from pollution, litter, overfishing, shipping, and climate change. Populations of large fi ... |
|
| Topics: marine life, news, oceans, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
And the Sand Played On World's deserts will become more desert-y, says U.N. |
|
05 Jun 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| And the Sand Played On World's deserts will become more desert-y, says U.N. Happy World Environment Day -- we got you some bad news! As climate change progresses, desert temperatures will rise up to 12.6 degrees F by the end of the century; rainfall in most deserts will decline by up to 20 percent; water will become scant, or too salty to drink or use for crops. So warns a chipper new Un ... |
|
| Topics: desertification, energy, news, solar voltaic power, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
Let My People Flow Water privatization falling out of favor |
|
28 Mar 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| Let My People Flow Water privatization falling out of favor The privatization of water systems took off globally in the '80s and '90s; now it seems to be going the way of ankle zippers and acid-washed denim. At last week's World Water Forum, delegates voted to issue a decree supporting government responsibility for providing safe drinking water. As if on cue, Argentina last week announced it was severing i ... |
|
| Topics: Argentina, news, United Nations, water conflicts (all these topics) |
|
|
The Sound of One Species Clapping Humans responsible for fastest rate of extinction since dinosaurs |
|
22 Mar 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| The Sound of One Species Clapping Humans responsible for fastest rate of extinction since dinosaurs Human beings continue to dominate "Survivor: Earth," voting other species off the island at a blistering pace. "In effect, we are currently responsible for the sixth major extinction event in the history of earth, and the greatest since the dinosaurs disappeared, 65 million years ago," sums up the new U.N. ... |
|
| Topics: news, United Nations, wildlife (all these topics) |
|
|
Ice Knowing You Enviros seek endangered status for Glacier National Park |
|
17 Feb 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| Ice Knowing You Enviros seek endangered status for Glacier National Park Greenland's not the only place where the glaciers, they are a-melting. Montana's Glacier National Park has lost over half its icy cover, and eco-activists have petitioned the United Nations to declare it endangered by global warming -- hoping to force U.S. policy makers to act on reducing the nation's greenhouse-gas emissions. Since Glac ... |
|
| Topics: Montana, national parks, news, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
All This Aggravation Ain't Satisfactionin' Us Montreal summit wraps up with agreement to ... have more summits |
|
12 Dec 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| All This Aggravation Ain't Satisfactionin' Us Montreal summit wraps up with agreement to ... have more summits The U.N. climate talks in Montreal ended this weekend with plenty of drama but little progress. The big news, such as it is, is an agreement by a coalition of some 150 nations to convene new talks to generate a set of binding greenhouse-gas emissions caps for 2012 when Kyoto expires. The U.S. balked a ... |
|
| Topics: climate, news, United Nations, United States (all these topics) |
|
|
The Summit of Our Discontent U.S. continues to stomp mightily on Montreal climate summit |
|
07 Dec 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| The Summit of Our Discontent U.S. continues to stomp mightily on Montreal climate summit Poor Canada got it from both sides this week at the Montreal climate summit. On Tuesday, it suggested that the 189 nations party to the original 1992 U.N. climate convention meet formally over the next two years to discuss post-Kyoto strategies for greenhouse-gas reduction. The Bush administration/ExxonMobil deleg ... |
|
| Topics: Canada, climate, news, United Nations, United States (all these topics) |
|
|
The Long, Hot Summit U.S. senators, E.U. ministers press Bush to join climate talks |
|
06 Dec 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| The Long, Hot Summit U.S. senators, E.U. ministers press Bush to join climate talks At the U.N. climate summit in Montreal, there's increased pressure on the U.S. to join in -- and when we say "pressure" we mean "begging." On Monday, 24 senators, including four Republicans, sent President Bush an open letter asking the administration to participate in the negotiations -- or ... |
|
| Topics: climate, European Union, news, United Nations, United States (all these topics) |
|
|
A Slow-Down Dirty Shame World's forests disappearing slightly less quickly |
|
15 Nov 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| A Slow-Down Dirty Shame World's forests disappearing slightly less quickly Good news! The world's forests are being destroyed at a slightly-slower-if-still-alarming rate. That's the chipper assessment of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization's new report on global deforestation. It compared trends in 229 countries over the past five years with data from the 1990s, finding that on average, just over 18 ... |
|
| Topics: deforestation, news, United Nations, wilderness (all these topics) |
|
|
Have Your Lake and Deplete it Too U.N. urges decisive action to save Africa's lakes |
|
02 Nov 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| Have Your Lake and Deplete it Too U.N. urges decisive action to save Africa's lakes Africa's 650-plus lakes are degrading at an astonishing rate, says the U.N., and protecting them is crucial to restoring the continent's health and boosting its prosperity. The U.N. Environment Program's new "Africa's Lakes: An Atlas of Environmental Change" compares recent and past satellite images of the water bodies, reveal ... |
|
| Topics: Africa, lakes, news, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
Ape Fear New plan aims to save endangered great apes of Africa |
|
01 Sep 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| Ape Fear New plan aims to save endangered great apes of Africa Conservationists are angling to raise $30 million to stop gorillas and chimpanzees from going extinct in the wild within a human generation. The U.N. Environment Program's just-released "World Atlas of Great Apes and Their Conservation" reveals a poor prognosis for the survival of gorilla and chimp populations in Africa, where their tribulation ... |
|
| Topics: Africa, news, United Nations, wildlife (all these topics) |
|
|
Arid Extra Dry Desertification will be big bummer for hundreds of thousands worldwide |
|
21 Jun 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| Arid Extra Dry Desertification will be big bummer for hundreds of thousands worldwide Hundreds of thousands of people -- some of them the world's poorest -- will be displaced in the next 30 years as the globe's deserts expand, according to the latest report from the U.N.'s Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. Climate change is likely to intensify droughts, heat waves, and floods in "drylands," which co ... |
|
| Topics: climate, desertification, news, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
Pick a Little, Talk a Little Few new ideas emerge from latest U.N. climate meetings |
|
18 May 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| Pick a Little, Talk a Little Few new ideas emerge from latest U.N. climate meetings What comes after Kyoto? That was the focus of a 190-nation, two-day seminar convened by the U.N. this week in Bonn, Germany, the first in what's likely to be a gazillion-step process of figuring out what sort of climate-change treaty should pick up where the Kyoto Protocol leaves off. As usual, U.S. representatives were brimming with enthusias ... |
|
| Topics: climate, news, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
Doom and Gloom With a Sense of, Uh ... Doom Comprehensive assessment of world's ecosystems released; be very afraid |
|
30 Mar 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| Doom and Gloom With a Sense of, Uh ... Doom Comprehensive assessment of world's ecosystems released; be very afraid The largest and most comprehensive assessment of the world's ecosystems ever undertaken was released today, and the results constitute a "stark warning" that "the ability of the planet's ecosystems to sustain future generations can no longer be taken for granted," according to the 45-member bo ... |
|
| Topics: health, news, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
Just One Day Out of Life, It Would Be So Nice World Water Day celebrated by U.N., few others |
|
22 Mar 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| Just One Day Out of Life, It Would Be So Nice World Water Day celebrated by U.N., few others In case you haven't heard -- and you haven't -- today is World Water Day, an annual holiday aimed at drawing attention to alarming stats about global water needs, encouraging world leaders to take action, and otherwise passing by unnoticed. But today isn't just any old World Water Day; it's also the kick-off for the United Nat ... |
|
| Topics: news, United Nations, water pollution (all these topics) |
|
|
A Stall for Volunteers U.S. blocks binding mercury treaty |
|
28 Feb 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| A Stall for Volunteers U.S. blocks binding mercury treaty U.N.-brokered international talks on mercury-reduction plans wrapped up last week. Instead of the legally binding global treaty favored by the European Union, the result was a plan to curb mercury emissions through "voluntary partnerships" among member countries, international organizations, and industries. "Voluntary" being the buz ... |
|
| Topics: news, toxics, United Nations, United States (all these topics) |
|
|
People, People Who Breed People Better make room -- world population to hit 9.1 billion by 2050 |
|
25 Feb 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| People, People Who Breed People Better make room -- world population to hit 9.1 billion by 2050 There will be 9.1 billion people on this li'l planet of ours by 2050, according to revised U.N. population figures released yesterday. That's a 40 percent increase from today's mere (!) 6.5 billion. While population in developed countries is expected to remain largely stable at 1.2 billion -- mainly due to immigration, as thei ... |
|
| Topics: news, population, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|
Global Warming -- It's Infectious Environmental change linked to spread of infectious diseases |
|
23 Feb 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| Global Warming -- It's Infectious Environmental change linked to spread of infectious diseases If the catastrophic flooding, drought, and weather-related calamities associated with global warming don't kill you, exotic infectious diseases might step up to do the job, a new report released by the U.N. suggests. It found that changes to the environment -- such as deforestation, urban growth, mining, and pollution of c ... |
|
| Topics: climate, health, news, United Nations (all these topics) |
|
|