United Nations News Centre - Honouring Gandhi’s legacy, Deputy Secretary-General reaffirms power of peaceful protest
Thursday, October 2, 2014
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Oct 1 (2 days ago)
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In hope,
Alaphia and the rest of the Avaaz team
------------------------------
Dear friends,
Tomorrow, on Mahatma Gandhi’s birth anniversary, the government is launching a ‘Clean India’ campaign. While we may not agree with everything the government does, we can recognise that we can all play a part to bring about a sanitation revolution in India.
From beaches to beautiful hill stations - everywhere we turn in India, mountains of litter mar our landscape. Littering seems to be a pervasive problem but even more deadly is the total lack of sanitation for millions of Indians. Let’s pledge to care as much about the state of our public spaces as we do about our private homes.
When over 1 million of us take this pledge, we will take it to the media to show the massive support to clean up India. Pledge now!
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/
Half of India’s population still doesn’t use a private toilet and India tops in open defecation all over the world. This means that even well fed children under five are at risk of malnourishment, deadly disease and death from diarrhea and encephalitis. Experts have warned that just building toilets won’t do, because having a toilet doesn’t necessarily guarantee that Indians will use it. It is only a change in public attitudes towards hygiene and sanitation that will guarantee lasting change.
This is where all of us come in. If we pledge to change our own behaviour in public spaces, and politely request other people to do the same, each of us could lead this change in attitude that is so crucial to saving millions of lives in India.
Of course the government needs to support this sanitation revolution by keeping its promise of building toilets and work on changing attitudes. But we can all make a start with our own actions by committing to respect our public space and making sure others do as well. Pledge now!
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/
Nearly half a million of us just marched all over the world to demand that our leaders take decisive action to tackle climate change. This includes hundreds of people in India. Avaaz members have repeatedly shown that caring for our environment is caring for humanity. Let’s do the same for a clean and hygienic India.
In hope,
Alaphia, Shreya, and the rest of the Avaaz team
More Information
Why India’s sanitation crisis is a public health emergency (LiveMint)
http://www.livemint.com/
The final frontier (The Economist)
http://www.economist.com/news/
Modi orders officials to clean loos on Gandhi’s birthday (Reuters)
http://in.reuters.com/article/
From littering to spitting: sanitary problems in India’s public spaces (Urban Times)
http://urbantimes.co/2013/02/
India tops in open defecation (The Hindu)
http://www.thehindu.com/news/
Nearly half of India’s population still defecates in the open (Development And Cooperation)
http://www.dandc.eu/en/
Avaaz.org is a 38-million-person global campaign network that works to ensure that the views and values of the world's people shape global decision-making. ("Avaaz" means "voice" or "song" in many languages.) Avaaz members live in every nation of the world; our team is spread across 18 countries on 6 continents and operates in 17 languages. Learn about some of Avaaz's biggest campaigns here, or follow us on Facebook or Twitter.
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Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Arvind Kejriwal’s Quest for Change
Arvind Kejriwal’s Quest for Change
MEET ANNA HAZARE AND ARVIND KEJRIWAL ON SUNDAY 18TH DECEMBER IN CHENNAI AT PACHIAPPA GROUND AT 6 PM SHARP, BE A VOLUNTEER OF INDIA AGAINST CORRUPTION, ENROLL TODAY ITSELF
MEET ANNA HAZARE AND ARVIND KEJRIWAL ON SUNDAY 18TH DECEMBER IN CHENNAI AT PACHIAPPA GROUND AT 6 PM SHARP, BE A VOLUNTEER OF INDIA AGAINST CORRUPTION, ENROLL TODAY ITSELF
Friday, November 18, 2011
Weather disasters increasing from climate change, says UN
rom: IGSD
November 18, 2011
Fast mitigation is best adaptation
Washington, DC, November 18, 2011 – A definitive UN science report released today confirms the link between climate change and extreme weather events, including punishing heat waves, droughts, and torrential rains and resulting floods.
The report warns that the U.S. will suffer heat waves, droughts, and more powerful hurricanes like Irene, with vulnerable people and places likely to suffer most from extreme weather, including low-lying island States facing sea level rise and stronger storm surges, and drought-prone countries in Africa.
New York released its own climate study this week, predicting that with expected sea level rise and stronger storms, future hurricanes could flood the tunnels into Manhattan within an hour and put one-third of the city underwater, with climate induced impacts beginning within a decade. The cost of US weather disasters in 2011 is already approaching $50 billion, according to the National Climate Data Center.
It is now certain that human emissions of greenhouse gases and warming aerosols like black carbon are increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather by putting more heat energy into the climate system.
“These climate change impacts have become so clear and so close now that we need fast, aggressive mitigation if we hope to avoid the worst consequences,” said Durwood Zaelke, President of the Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development.
“Fast mitigation is the best adaptation,” Zaelke added. “Fast mitigation means cutting short-lived climate forcers, including black carbon, ground-level ozone, and hydrofluorocarbons, or HFCs, used in refrigeration. Cutting these non-CO2 climate forcers can be done quickly and inexpensively using existing technologies and in most cases existing laws and institutions.” This can cut the rate of global warming in half for several decades and the rate of warming in the Arctic by two-thirds, according to a report by the UN Environment Program and the World Meteorological Organization.
Vulnerable island States, along with the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, are calling on the Montreal Protocol ozone treaty to reduce HFCs. The parties will be discussing an HFC phase-down next week at their annual meeting in Bali, Indonesia.
Zaelke stated, “States and cities need to start thinking how they will pay for adaptation and for cleaning up after extreme weather events, including following the precedent set by states in their battle with tobacco companies, which included lawsuits to recoup health care costs the states were paying to care for victims of tobacco injuries.” The lawsuits resulted in a historic $350 billion national tobacco settlement.
Addressing climate change also requires cutting emissions of CO2, the principal greenhouse gas, protecting and expanding forests and other “carbon sinks” that remove and store CO2, and developing other CO2 removal strategies to draw down excess CO2 from the atmosphere on a time scale of decades, rather than the millennial time scale of the natural CO2 removal process.
###
Contact: Candice Wu: +1.202.338.1300 ; candicewu@igsd.org
November 18, 2011
Fast mitigation is best adaptation
Washington, DC, November 18, 2011 – A definitive UN science report released today confirms the link between climate change and extreme weather events, including punishing heat waves, droughts, and torrential rains and resulting floods.
The report warns that the U.S. will suffer heat waves, droughts, and more powerful hurricanes like Irene, with vulnerable people and places likely to suffer most from extreme weather, including low-lying island States facing sea level rise and stronger storm surges, and drought-prone countries in Africa.
New York released its own climate study this week, predicting that with expected sea level rise and stronger storms, future hurricanes could flood the tunnels into Manhattan within an hour and put one-third of the city underwater, with climate induced impacts beginning within a decade. The cost of US weather disasters in 2011 is already approaching $50 billion, according to the National Climate Data Center.
It is now certain that human emissions of greenhouse gases and warming aerosols like black carbon are increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather by putting more heat energy into the climate system.
“These climate change impacts have become so clear and so close now that we need fast, aggressive mitigation if we hope to avoid the worst consequences,” said Durwood Zaelke, President of the Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development.
“Fast mitigation is the best adaptation,” Zaelke added. “Fast mitigation means cutting short-lived climate forcers, including black carbon, ground-level ozone, and hydrofluorocarbons, or HFCs, used in refrigeration. Cutting these non-CO2 climate forcers can be done quickly and inexpensively using existing technologies and in most cases existing laws and institutions.” This can cut the rate of global warming in half for several decades and the rate of warming in the Arctic by two-thirds, according to a report by the UN Environment Program and the World Meteorological Organization.
Vulnerable island States, along with the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, are calling on the Montreal Protocol ozone treaty to reduce HFCs. The parties will be discussing an HFC phase-down next week at their annual meeting in Bali, Indonesia.
Zaelke stated, “States and cities need to start thinking how they will pay for adaptation and for cleaning up after extreme weather events, including following the precedent set by states in their battle with tobacco companies, which included lawsuits to recoup health care costs the states were paying to care for victims of tobacco injuries.” The lawsuits resulted in a historic $350 billion national tobacco settlement.
Addressing climate change also requires cutting emissions of CO2, the principal greenhouse gas, protecting and expanding forests and other “carbon sinks” that remove and store CO2, and developing other CO2 removal strategies to draw down excess CO2 from the atmosphere on a time scale of decades, rather than the millennial time scale of the natural CO2 removal process.
###
Contact: Candice Wu: +1.202.338.1300 ; candicewu@igsd.org
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Northeast States Teaming Up to Build EV Charging Network
The West Coast has wasted no time building electric vehicle corridors, but so far the Northeast has lagged behind on electric car infrastructure, especially considering the size of the population there. Luckily, the lagging behind will soon end. A new regional initiative called the Northeast Electric Vehicle Network will bring together 11 states plus Washington, D.C. to build an electric car charging network. The network plans to bring hundreds of chargers online over the next couple of years to encourage adoption of EVs in the region.
The states participating are Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Vermont. Maine will be represented on a city level instead of statewide. The states will team up with automakers, both large retailers and small shops and charging network companies to work on placing charging stations in the most convenient locations.
Out of the 15,000 EVs currently on the road in the U.S., surprisingly only about 1,000 of them are in the Northeast. These states want to encourage more EV use not just for environmental reasons, but also because it will save them money. The Northeast imports about 25 billion gallons of oil each year, so if all-electric vehicles replaced just 5 percent of conventional ones, the region could save $4.6 billion every year. I'd call that a win-win.
If President Obama's call for one million plug-in vehicles on the road by 2015 comes to fruition, based on population, about 200,000 will be hitting Northeastern roads. Good thing those drivers will have a place to charge up.
via Inside Climate News
The states participating are Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Vermont. Maine will be represented on a city level instead of statewide. The states will team up with automakers, both large retailers and small shops and charging network companies to work on placing charging stations in the most convenient locations.
Out of the 15,000 EVs currently on the road in the U.S., surprisingly only about 1,000 of them are in the Northeast. These states want to encourage more EV use not just for environmental reasons, but also because it will save them money. The Northeast imports about 25 billion gallons of oil each year, so if all-electric vehicles replaced just 5 percent of conventional ones, the region could save $4.6 billion every year. I'd call that a win-win.
If President Obama's call for one million plug-in vehicles on the road by 2015 comes to fruition, based on population, about 200,000 will be hitting Northeastern roads. Good thing those drivers will have a place to charge up.
via Inside Climate News
Huge Sahara Desert Solar Project to Break Ground Next Year
The massive Dersertec Initiative, which will include several solar power plants constructed in the Sahara Desert, as well as parts of the MIddle East and Europe, is coming together as planned. The first plant, a 500-MW concentrated solar installation, is now set to break ground next year.
This first plant will be located in Morocco and cost about $2.8 billion and will take two to four years to complete. The first phase of the plant will be 7.4 square miles and have a capacity of 150 MW.
The Dersertec Initiative is being funded by a large consortium of European companies and organizations. The huge project is expected to provide 15 to 20 percent of Europe's electricity needs by 2050, while also providing electricity to the Middle East and Northern Africa.
via CleanTechnica
This first plant will be located in Morocco and cost about $2.8 billion and will take two to four years to complete. The first phase of the plant will be 7.4 square miles and have a capacity of 150 MW.
The Dersertec Initiative is being funded by a large consortium of European companies and organizations. The huge project is expected to provide 15 to 20 percent of Europe's electricity needs by 2050, while also providing electricity to the Middle East and Northern Africa.
via CleanTechnica
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