Posts Tagged ‘Increased’

Aviation Maintenance Expansion Reflects Increased Demand For A320…

Phoenix, AZ (PRWEB) December 12, 2011

By working closely with Airbus and the FAA, Evergreen Maintenance Center Inc., (EMC) has successfully expanded their certificate to include the A320 family of aircraft. “With the new company’s vision in place, EMC is focused on expanding our programs and services by 20% within the next 12 months,” remarks Hal Heule, Chief Executive Officer of Evergreen Maintenance Center. “Considering Airbus has won more than 8,100 orders for the A320 series aircraft and delivered over 4,800 to date, we consider this an important step forward in EMC’s expansion plan.”

As a result, EMC has made strategic investments in tooling, training, and technical data so that new and existing global clients can fully leverage EMC’s 35 years of aviation experience across this popular family of Airbus aircraft.

“This significant expansion into the Airbus product line, which includes the A318, A319, A320, and A321, is another example of how EMC continues to listen and deliver aviation solutions to our world-wide customer base,” adds Joyce Johnson-Miller, the Chairperson of Evergreen Maintenance Center’s Board of Directors.

About Evergreen Maintenance Center (EMC)                                                                            

EMC, based in Arizona, is the largest aircraft storage, and heavy maintenance facility in the world with 20 million square feet of ramp and storage area that accommodates over 400 aircraft. For more than three decades, the privately owned company has been a FAA Approved FAR Part 145 repair station with a FAA Class IV Airframe Rating (#ERKR675D). In addition to FAA certification, EMC is ISO 9001-2008 registered, holds maintenance certifications from the Air Transport Canada, Aruba, Bermuda, and EASA regulatory agencies. They also offer various levels of maintenance and paint services on Airbus, Boeing, Embraer, McDonnell Douglas, Raytheon, and Bombardier aircraft. Periodically, EMC’s leadership grants interviews and has had the pleasure of working with the Discovery Channel, The Today Show, Nightly Business News, and has been featured in Aircraft Technology Engineering & Maintenance, Aviation Week, Air Transport World, New York Times, Overhaul and Maintenance, MRO Management, SpeedNews and several other leading publications regarding their milestones, position, and contributions to the aviation industry. In addition, they are consistently recognized by the FAA with the esteemed Diamond Award and charter members of The Aircraft Fleet Recycling Association (AFRA), which is focused on improving sustainability within the aircraft industry.

To learn more about EMC please visit their website at: http://www.evergreenmc.com Note: The names of actual companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners.

CONTACT INFORMATION:

Betsy Shaw

Marketing & Customer Service

Evergreen Maintenance Center, Inc. (EMC)            

V: 520.682.4181

Website: http://www.evergreenmc.com

CA submittal

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Environment

State Street’s Annual Corporate Responsibility Report Highlights Increased Employee Volunteerism and Reduced Carbon Footprint

July 15, 2011 09:00 AM Eastern Daylight Time 

Company Also Plans to Cut Carbon Emissions Another 10 Percent in Next
Three Years

BOSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–State Street Corporation (NYSE: STT), today released its 2010 Corporate
Responsibility report. Published annually since 2004, the report
highlights the Company’s environmental, social and governance
performance (ESG) over the past year and goals for 2011 and beyond. Key
milestones include the following:

“Throughout the past year, we have taken several important steps to
further ensure corporate responsibility’s role as an important part of
our business strategy and DNA”

  • Employee volunteer service hours rose 8 percent overall and 4 percent
    per person to 78,000 hours or 2.7 hours per person. The State Street
    Foundation’s match of employee gifts also rose 25 percent to $ 2
    million and the number of employee gifts matched climbed 33 percent to
    4,800.
  • From 2009 to 2010, total direct CO2 emissions from State
    Street’s global operations declined 798 metric tons, or 12 percent
    overall and 6 percent per person. The company has set a goal of
    reducing its carbon footprint by another 10 percent by 2013. State
    Street also increased its use of renewable energy by nearly 75 percent.
  • State Street Global Advisors (SSgA), State Street’s investment
    management business, achieved record growth within its ESG investment
    strategies. With $ 119 billion in total assets at March 31, 2011,
    SSgA’s ESG assets increased by 39 percent from the firm’s year-end
    2010 ESG asset levels.
  • [In 2010], State Street encouraged environmentally friendly commuting
    with 520 flexible work arrangements, resulting in a reduction in
    employee travel by a combined total of more than 34,000 miles per week

Other business, environment, philanthropy and volunteerism highlights
include:

Business

  • For its clients in 2010 State Street introduced a new ESG reporting
    service that enables institutional investors to be better informed on
    ESG issues and better placed to assess any potential ESG risks and
    opportunities, key factors in investment decisions today .

Environment

  • Renewable energy purchased increased 73 percent in 2010 to 110
    gigawatt hours.
  • Oil consumption decreased 31,000 gallons or 49 percent overall and 56
    percent per person.
  • Gas consumption declined 91,000 therms, or 9 percent overall and 15
    percent per person.
  • Total waste dropped 496 tons, or 24 percent overall, and 38 percent,
    or 100 pounds, per person.
  • Furthering its commitment to environmental sustainability, State
    Street’s new offices in Hangzhou, China are on track to achieve gold
    level certification in Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
    (LEED) and its offices in Sydney, Australia achieved a five-star
    rating from the Green Building Council of Australia’s Green Star
    system as well as a 4.5 rating from the National Australian Built
    Environment Rating System (NABERS).

Philanthropy and Volunteerism

  • Overall charitable contributions rose 13 percent to $ 17.8 million in
    2010 from $ 15.8 million in 2009.
  • The State Street Foundation, the company’s charitable grantmaking arm,
    recently updated its social investment philosophy and grantmaking
    guidelines. The Foundation will deploy new evaluation tools in 2011 to
    measure the effectiveness of its grantmaking on advancing its new
    mission – to support education and workforce development opportunities
    for disadvantaged populations where it operates.

Other Achievements

  • State Street achieved a major CR milestone with its first-ever
    ISO14001 certification for its operations in Edinburgh and London.
    ISO14001 is an internationally recognized management tool for
    environmental impact identification and performance improvement.
  • State Street’s efforts have earned the company inclusion in leading
    sustainability rankings and indices in 2010 such as the Dow Jones
    Sustainability Index and the No. 2 financial services company on
    Newsweek’s Green Rankings and No. 35 overall out of 500 publicly
    traded companies.

“Throughout the past year, we have taken several important steps to
further ensure corporate responsibility’s role as an important part of
our business strategy and DNA,” said Jay Hooley, chairman, president and
chief executive officer at State Street. “Collectively, these efforts
create value for our clients, shareholders, and the communities where we
live and work.”

State Street’s CR report adheres to Global Reporting Initiative (GRI)
principles and criteria, a comprehensive set of guidelines that helps
the company report on issues material to both the company and its
stakeholders and makes reporting more transparent. The company engages
Det Norske Veritas (DNV), an independent foundation headquartered in
Oslo, Norway, to assure and verify the information contained in the
report and on its GRI application.

About State Street Corporation

State Street Corporation (NYSE: STT) is one of the world’s leading
providers of financial services to institutional investors, including
investment servicing, investment management and investment research and
trading. With $ 22.6 trillion in assets under custody and administration
and $ 2.1 trillion* in assets under management at March 31, 2011, State
Street operates in 26 countries and more than 100 geographic markets
worldwide. For more information, visit State Street’s website at www.statestreet.com.

*This AUM includes the assets of the SPDR Gold Trust (approx. $ 56
billion as of March 31, 2011), for which State Street Global Markets,
LLC, an affiliate of State Street Global Advisors serves as the
marketing agent.

Business Wire Environment News

Increased protection urgently needed for tunas

Gland, Switzerland / Washington DC, U.S. — For the first time, all species of scombrids (tunas, bonitos, mackerels and Spanish mackerels) and billfishes (swordfish and marlins) have been assessed for the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™. Of the 61 known species, seven are classified in a threatened category, being at serious risk of extinction. Four species are listed as Near Threatened and nearly two-thirds have been placed in the Least Concern category.

The results show that the situation is particularly serious for tunas. Five of the eight species of tuna are in the threatened or Near Threatened IUCN Red List Categories. These include: Southern Bluefin (Thunnus maccoyii), Critically Endangered; Atlantic Bluefin (T. thynnus), Endangered; Bigeye (T. obesus), Vulnerable; Yellowfin (T. albacares), Near Threatened; and Albacore (T. alalunga), Near Threatened. 

This new information will be invaluable in helping governments make decisions which will safeguard the future of these species, many of which are of extremely high economic value, and is a timely input for the 3rd Joint Meeting of the Tuna Regional Fisheries Management Organizations (RMFO) being held in La Jolla, California, July 11-15.

These assessments are a part of the Global Marine Species Assessment (GMSA) project, a joint initiative of IUCN and Conservation International. Since its inception in 2005, the GMSA mission has been to provide more than 20,000 marine species assessments for inclusion on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.

“This is the first time that fishery scientists, ichthyologists and conservationists have come together to jointly produce an assessment of the threats facing a commercially important group of fishes,” says Dr Bruce B. Collette, Chair of the IUCN Species Survival Commission’s (SSC) Tuna and Billfish Specialist Group, Senior Scientist of the U.S National Marine Fisheries Service, and lead author of the paper.

There is growing concern that in spite of the healthy status of several epipelagic fish stocks (those living near the surface), some scombrid and billfish species are being heavily overfished, and there is a lack of resolve to protect against overexploitation driven by high prices. Many populations are exploited by multinational fisheries whose regulation, from a political perspective, is exceedingly difficult.

“All three bluefin tuna species are susceptible to collapse under continued excessive fishing pressure.  The Southern Bluefin has already essentially crashed, with little hope of recovery,” says Dr Kent Carpenter, Professor at Old Dominion University, manager of IUCN’s Marine Biodiversity Unit and an author of the paper. “If no changes are made to current fishing practices, the western Atlantic Bluefin stocks are at risk of collapse as they are showing little sign that the population is rebuilding following a significant reduction in the 1970s.”

Three species of billfishes are in threatened or Near Threatened categories: Blue Marlin (Makaira nigricans), Vulnerable; White Marlin (Kajikia albida), Vulnerable; and Striped Marlin (Kajikia audax), Near Threatened.

Most of the long-lived economically valuable species are considered threatened. They mature later than short-lived species and their reproductive turnover is longer, and as such recovery from population declines takes more time. As these scombrids and billfishes are at the top of the pelagic food web, population reductions of these predators may cause significant negative effects on other species that are critical to the balance of the marine ecosystem and that are economically important as a source of food.

The future of threatened scombrids and billfishes rests on the ability of RFMOs and fishing nations to properly manage these species. Southern and Atlantic Bluefin populations have been so reduced that the most efficient way to avoid collapse is to shut down the fisheries until stocks are rebuilt to healthy levels. However, this would cause substantial economic hardship and hinder the ability of RFMOs to control fishing because of the increased incentive for illegal fishing that would be created under these circumstances.

“Temporarily shutting down tuna fisheries would only be a part of a much needed recovery programme. In order to prevent illegal fishing, strong deterrents need to be implemented,” says Jean-Christophe Vié, Deputy Director, IUCN’s Global Species Programme. “This new study shows that there is an urgent need for effective management. Scientific findings should not be discarded in order to maintain short-term profit. Marine life and jobs for future generations are both at stake.”

“This study is a wake-up call for the international organizations responsible for the management of tuna stocks”, said Dr. Andrew Rosenberg Chief Scientist for Conservation International. “The fact that several stocks of high value species like bluefin tuna have become threatened or are now in danger of extinction while under international management means that we must do a better job of protecting our ocean resources.”

The recovery of fish stocks is possible through reducing fishing-induced mortality rates to well below the maximum sustainable yield (MSY), as shown in the case of the highly valued eastern population of the Atlantic Bluefin. Recently exploited at three times the MSY, a decrease in the total allowable catch and stricter monitoring and compliance measures have led to recent catch reductions of almost 75% over the past few years. This will enable the species to recover to sustainable levels as long as the current fishing controls are maintained.

Notes to editors
Copies of the Science paper “High Value and Long-Lived: Double Jeopardy for Tuna and Billfishes” may be obtained from the AAAS Office of Public Programs.
Please contact  +1-202-326-6440 or [email protected]

For further information, please contact:

Kevin Connor, Media Manager, CI, +1 703 341 2405 

Lynne Labanne, Species Programme Communications Officer, IUCN, t +41 22 999 0153, 
m +41 79 527 7221,  e  [email protected]

Kathryn Pintus, Species Programme Communications, IUCN, t +41 22 999 0154,
e [email protected]

For high resolution photos please contact: [email protected] or [email protected]

The tuna and billfish assessments
The tuna and billfish assessments are a part of the Global Marine Species Assessment’s mission to complete more than 20,000 marine species assessments for inclusion on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. The Global Marine Species Assessment Unit (GMSA), or Marine Biodiversity Unit, is a joint initiative of IUCN and Conservation International. The GMSA is headquartered in the Department of Biology at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, and is largely enabled by the generous support of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation and Tom Haas.

To complete the tuna and billfish IUCN Red List assessments, the GMSA collaborated with a wide diversity of international scientists who represent Fisheries Management Organizations, international conservation organizations; government agencies, universities, and independent fisheries research institutions. IUCN Red List Workshops and finalization of results for tunas and billfishes were made possible by the generous support of Tom Haas and the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation, Conservation International, Lenfest Ocean Program, International Seafood Sustainability Foundation, International Game Fish Association, Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade, Academia Sinica, Taiwan Marine National Park Headquarters, Instituto del Mar del Perú, and CIMAR- University of Costa Rica.

Complete results of the tuna and billfish species assessments will be published on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species in November 2011. As of July 7, 2011, draft assessments can be found at: http://sci.odu.edu/gmsa/about/tunas_billfishes.shtml

The IUCN Red List threat categories
The IUCN Red List threat categories are as follows:

  • Extinct or Extinct in the Wild

  • Critically Endangered, Endangered and Vulnerable: species threatened with global extinction
    Near Threatened: species close to the threatened thresholds or that would be threatened without ongoing specific conservation measures

  • Least Concern: species evaluated with a lower risk of extinction

  • Data Deficient: no assessment because of insufficient data

  • Critically Endangered (Possibly Extinct): this is not a new IUCN Red List Category, but is a flag developed to identify those Critically Endangered species that are in all probability already Extinct but for which confirmation is required, for example, through more extensive surveys being carried out and failing to find any individuals.

The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™
The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™ (or the IUCN Red List) is the world’s most comprehensive information source on the global conservation status of plant, fungi and animal species. It is based on an objective system for assessing the risk of extinction of a species should no conservation action be taken.

Species are assigned to one of eight categories of threat based on whether they meet criteria linked to population trend, population size and structure and geographic range. Species listed as Critically Endangered, Endangered or Vulnerable are collectively described as ‘Threatened’.

The IUCN Red List is not just a register of names and associated threat categories. It is a rich compendium of information on the threats to the species, their ecological requirements, where they live, and information on conservation actions that can be used to reduce or prevent extinctions.

The IUCN Red List is a joint effort between IUCN and its Species Survival Commission, working with its Red List partners BirdLife International; Botanic Gardens Conservation International; Conservation International; NatureServe; Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew; Sapienza University of Rome; Texas A&M University; Wildscreen; and Zoological Society of London.

About IUCN
IUCN, the International Union for Conservation of Nature, helps the world find pragmatic solutions to our most pressing environment and development challenges by supporting scientific research; managing field projects all over the world; and bringing governments, NGOs, the UN, international conventions and companies together to develop policy, laws and best practice.

The world’s oldest and largest global environmental network, IUCN is a democratic membership union with more than 1,000 government and NGO member organizations, and almost 11,000 volunteer scientists and experts in some 160 countries. IUCN’s work is supported by over 1,000 professional staff in 60 offices and hundreds of partners in public, NGO and private sectors around the world. IUCN’s headquarters are located in Gland, near Geneva, in Switzerland.
www.iucn.org 

About the Species Survival Commission
The Species Survival Commission (SSC) is the largest of IUCN’s six volunteer commissions with a global membership of around 7500 experts.  SSC advises IUCN and its members on the wide range of technical and scientific aspects of species conservation, and is dedicated to securing a future for biodiversity.  SSC has significant input into the international agreements dealing with biodiversity conservation. 

About Conservation International
Building upon a strong foundation of science, partnership and field demonstration, Conservation International empowers societies to responsibly and sustainably care for nature, our global biodiversity, for the long term well-being of people. Founded in 1987, CI has headquarters in the Washington, DC area, and nearly 900 employees working in more than 30 countries on four continents, plus 1,000+ partners around the world. For more information, visit www.conservation.org and follow us on Twitter: @ConservationOrg or Facebook: www.facebook.com/conservation.intl

About Old Dominion University
Old Dominion University is Virginia’s forward-focused, public doctoral research university for high-performing students from around the world. The university has 26 research centers and a total enrollment of 24,000 students.
http://www.odu.edu

About Lenfest Ocean Program
The Lenfest Ocean Program supports scientific research aimed at forging solutions to the challenges facing the global marine environment. The program was established in 2004 by the Lenfest Foundation and is managed by the Pew Environment Group.

Conservation International Press Release RSS Feed

Alcoa and Alcoa Foundation Conclude Green Works with Increased Global Commitment to Plant Trees and Support Environmental Projects

June 21, 2011 12:22 PM Eastern Daylight Time 

NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Alcoa Foundation marked the end of its two-month Green
Works
employee volunteer environmental service program today by
increasing its support to the Friends of Vatnajökull National Park in
Iceland and American Forests’ Global ReLeaf, two organizations committed
to environmental replenishment.

“We are deeply grateful for Alcoa’s
partnership with American Forests to protect and restore these vital
ecosystems.”

Alcoa (NYSE: AA) leaders and employees concluded the Green Works program
in Iceland by planting 125 trees in Reydarfjordur, where the Alcoa
Fjardaál smelter is located. Following the tree planting, Alcoa Iceland
contributed US$ 700,000 to the Friends of Vatnajökull National Park to
support education, research and environmental projects at Vatnajökull
National Park, the largest national park in Europe.

In addition, Alcoa Foundation added US$ 200,000 to an American Forests’
Global ReLeaf grant awarded earlier this year that focuses on
environmental restoration projects in Alcoa communities worldwide. The
increase brings the total of the grant to US$ 800,000. The organization
will assist Alcoa with its Ten
Million Trees
initiative over three years.

“Alcoa is committed to sustainability, which includes taking care of our
forests,” said Paula Davis, President, Alcoa Foundation. “Planting 10
million trees can absorb more than 250,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide
per year and make a significant difference in our quality of life across
the globe.”

This year, Global ReLeaf will award mini
grants to 22 qualified NGO and environmental organizations
that will
work with Alcoa employees across the globe to plant trees in their local
communities. Only native tree species will be planted to maintain the
integrity of the environment. The grant will facilitate the planting of
more than 225,000 trees and aligns with Alcoa Foundation’s
sustainability focus to “Reduce, Recycle and Replenish.”

“Alcoa understands how important forests are for sustaining the health
of the planet and the well-being of all its inhabitants,” said Scott
Steen, CEO, American Forests. “We are deeply grateful for Alcoa’s
partnership with American Forests to protect and restore these vital
ecosystems.”

About Alcoa’s Ten Million Trees Program
Since 2003, more
than 3.5 million trees have been planted as part of Alcoa’s efforts to
strengthen the communities where Alcoa employees live and work. The Ten
Million Trees initiative encourages employees to take an active role in
conserving flora and fauna, managing biodiversity, enhancing parks and
land use, and promoting reforestation in partnership with their
families, local community groups and customers.

Launched on Earth Day in 2003, Ten Million Trees grew from the
successful One Million Trees program, which began in 1998 with the goal
of Alcoa planting a million trees within 10 years. Employees and their
families at more than 140 Alcoa locations in 20 countries raced to that
goal in half the time expected.

About Alcoa Foundation
Alcoa Foundation is one of the
largest corporate foundations in the U.S., with assets of approximately
US$ 436 million. Founded more than 50 years ago, Alcoa Foundation has
invested more than US$ 530 million since 1952. In 2010, Alcoa Foundation
contributed nearly US$ 20 million to nonprofit organizations throughout
the world, focusing on promoting environmental stewardship, enabling
economic and social sustainability, and preparing tomorrow’s leaders
through education and learning. The work of Alcoa Foundation is further
enhanced by Alcoa’s thousands of employee volunteers, who in 2010 gave
more than 720,000 service hours. Through the company’s signature Month
of Service (October) program, Alcoa employees share their energy,
passion and purpose to make a difference in our communities. In 2010, a
record 49 percent of Alcoans took part in nearly 1,000 Month of Service
events across 24 countries, reaching 59,000 children, serving 17,000
meals, planting 16,000 trees and supporting 3,000 nonprofit
organizations. For more information about Alcoa Foundation, please
access www.alcoa.com/foundation.

About Alcoa
Alcoa (NYSE:AA) is the world’s leading producer
of primary and fabricated aluminum, as well as the world’s largest miner
of bauxite and refiner of alumina. In addition to inventing the
modern-day aluminum industry, Alcoa innovation has been behind major
milestones in the aerospace, automotive, packaging, building and
construction, commercial transportation, consumer electronics and
industrial markets over the past 120 years. Among the solutions Alcoa
markets are flat-rolled products, hard alloy extrusions, and forgings,
as well as Alcoa® wheels, fastening systems, precision and investment
castings, and building systems in addition to its expertise in other
light metals such as titanium and nickel-based super alloys.
Sustainability is an integral part of Alcoa’s operating practices and
the product design and engineering it provides to customers. Alcoa has
been a member of the Dow Jones Sustainability Index for nine consecutive
years and approximately 75 percent of all of the aluminum ever produced
since 1888 is still in active use today. Alcoa employs approximately
59,000 people in 31 countries across the world. More information can be
found at www.alcoa.com.

About American Forests: Global ReLeaf
American Forests is
focused on restoring and protecting urban and rural forests. Founded in
1875, the oldest national non-profit conservation organization in the
country has served as a catalyst for many of the most important
milestones in the conservation movement, including the founding of the
U.S. Forest Service, the national forest and national park systems, and
literally thousands of forest ecosystem restoration projects and public
education efforts. Since 1990, American Forests has planted nearly 40
million trees in forests throughout the U.S. and beyond, resulting in
cleaner air and drinking water, restored habitat for wildlife and fish,
and the removal of millions of tons of carbon from the atmosphere. Learn
more at www.americanforests.org.

Business Wire Environment News

EU carbon down on softer energy, increased permit supply

LONDON (Reuters) – European carbon emissions futures edged lower on Friday, as German power and gas prices softened and imminent new supply put pressure on prices., traders said.

Further information:

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Wanderport Receives Increased Sales Commitment From Australia to $123 Million USD

NEW YORK, NY–(Marketwire – February 16, 2010) – Wanderport Corp. (PINKSHEETS: WDRP) today announced that upon further review and negotiations, Gavin Ovens Holdings PTY LTD has augmented its sales and distribution commitment and revenue estimates.

Further information:

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