Posts Tagged ‘tackles’

Major Environmental Treaty Tackles Black Carbon as Climate Pollutant

Washington D.C., 10 May 2012. – Black carbon, the second most potent climate pollutant, has been targeted by the Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP), making it the first international treaty to act on the critical link between climate change and air pollution.  Once it enters into force, the black carbon amendment requires the development of national inventories and requests each party to “give priority … to emission reduction measures which also significantly reduce black carbon in order to provide benefits for health, environment and to help mitigation of near-term climate change.”


“Cutting black carbon is a triple win, slowing climate change, cleaning the air, and saving lives,” said Durwood Zaelke, President of the Institute for Governance and Sustainable Development.  “Regulating black carbon through CLRTAP can be a model for other regional treaties to control air pollution and climate change.”


The Executive Body of CLRTAP approved the amendment May 4th to address black carbon through the Convention’s 1999 Gothenburg Protocol, which currently sets emission ceilings for four major air pollutants, sulphur, nitrogen oxides, volatile organic compounds, and ammonia.  “This is a significant step towards requiring black carbon reductions in Europe and North America,” stated Zaelke.  The amendment will enter into force when two-thirds of the parties to the protocol ratify it, or 17 of the 26 countries.


The US EPA recently ranked black carbon the number two climate pollutant behind carbon dioxide.  Cutting black carbon in addition to other short-lived climate pollutants such as methane, ground-level ozone, and hydrofluorocarbons can reduce the current rate of global warming by almost half and the rate of warming in the Arctic by two-thirds for the next 30 or more years while avoiding up to 4.7 million premature deaths each year from outdoor air pollution and up to 1.6 million a year from indoor pollution.


The amendment follows the formation of the Climate and Clean Air Coalition to Reduce Short-Lived Climate Pollutants, which now has 13 members, including Sweden, Mexico, US, Canada, Ghana, Bangladesh, Norway, Colombia, Japan, Norway, UNEP, the European Commission, and the World Bank.  More information can be found at the Coalition website.


Zaelke said, “To win the climate war, we need to cut both the short-lived climate pollutants and long-lived carbon dioxide, a substantial portion of which remains in the air for millennia.  Fortunately, we’re gaining allies quickly in the second front in the fight against short-lived climate pollutants, where a victory will build the confidence we need to win the war.”  The short-lived climate pollutants are responsible for 40 to 45% of all warming, with carbon dioxide responsible for the other 55-60%.


Contact Info: Nathan Borgford-Parnell: +1.202.338.1300, [email protected]

Website : Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development

ENN Network News – ENN

H&M tackles environmental impact through organic hemp Better Cotton range

H&M is now using organic hemp in its clothing range, insisting that all of its cotton is to be sourced from completely sustainable sources by the year 2020.

The retailer’s move is a part of its ongoing sustainability programme. Today, the high street giant published its Conscious Actions Sustainability Report for 2011. In the report, it is alleged that H&M uses the world’s most organic cotton – 7.6 per cent – in the overall cotton it uses to manufacture its products.

Last autumn saw the launch of the first-ever H&M organic hemp clothing collection, with its first ‘Better Cotton’ denims at the forefront. It has been insisted that organic hemp has to use less water than other materials and also doesn’t require pesticides or fertilisers. Additionally,  it can be grown practically anywhere.

Studies by WWF have highlighted that the ‘Better Cotton’ H&M slashes pesticide use by anything from 32 to 81 per cent while saving 32 to 49 per cent of water usage and increasing net profits of any farmers that participate by at least 15 per cent.

Karl-Johan Persson, H&M’s CEO, released a statement that told of his company’s wish to see customers feeling more confident in the knowledge that everything they have purchased from H&M has been designed, manufactured, then handled with every bit of consideration for the earth’s population and its environment.  Persson added that H&M is always socially and environmentally responsibility while the sustainability of products remains of paramount importance.

Recycling, Green, and Environmental News

Environment Agency tackles floating pennywort

The Environment Agency has started work on a three year campaign to eradicate the Floating Pennywort plant from the Rivers Tame and Trent in the Tamworth area.

Floating Pennywort (Hydrocotyle Ranunculoides) is an invasive, non-native plant, originating from North America, introduced to the UK in the 1980s. It forms dense mats of vegetation over the water’s surface and is extremely prolific, sometimes growing up to 20cm a day. The Environment Agency has contracted HFN Landscapes to spray herbicides in order to tackle this problem before it gets too established.
 
Environment Agency Officer Alice Chapman said: “We are tackling the Floating Pennywort because if it is left untreated, it has the potential to block flood defences, interfere with water based recreation, and change the ecology of the area. It can also cost hundreds of thousands of pounds to control if not dealt with early on.”

The largest area of infestation is to be found in the Broad Meadow area of Tamworth, from the Oxbridge opposite Blackfriars Close to the weir. The Floating Pennywort now extends down the River Tame and into the River Trent, with patches of the plant being observed in previous years at Hopwas, Elford and the River Trent in Burton on Trent.

The team will be out spraying every couple of weeks in the Broad Meadow area of Tamworth. They will then conduct surveys down the Tame and Trent to find and treat any colonies that may have been formed by break-away pieces from the main colony.  This work will be part of an ongoing project, and it is estimated that complete eradication will take around three years.

The Environment Agency would like to urge members of the public not to put any plants or wildlife from their pond or fish tank into local watercourses. Many plants sold by the aquatic trade as oxygenators are non native and can cause problems in our lakes, reservoirs and rivers.  The same goes for any aquatic pets; non-native fish and terrapins are now found in our rivers and they can change the ecology and sometimes out-compete native species.

Anglers and water users can also help reduce the risk of spreading invasive species by making sure their equipment and clothing are not contaminated – for more details see our CHECK-CLEAN-DRY campaign web pages:

http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/homeandleisure/wildlife/129217.aspx

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