World Environment Day 2005
Sunday, November 22, 2009   08:01 GMT    
 - Africa
 - Asia-Pacific
     Afghanistan
     Iran
 - Caribbean
      Haiti
 - Europe
      Union in Diversity
 - Latin America
 - Mideast &
   Mediterranean
      Iraq
      Israel/Palestine
 - North America
      Neo-Cons
      Bush's Legacy
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Subscribe
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
 - Development
      MDGs
      City Voices
      Corruption
 - Civil Society
 - Globalisation
 - Environment
      Energy Crunch
      Climate Change
      Tierramérica
 - Human Rights
 - Health
      HIV/AIDS
 - Indigenous Peoples
 - Economy & Trade
 - Labour
 - Population
     Reproductive Rights
     Migration&Refugees
 - Arts &
          Entertainment
 - Education
 - In Focus
Languages
   ENGLISH
   ESPAÑOL
   FRANÇAIS
   ARABIC
   DEUTSCH
   ITALIANO
   JAPANESE
   NEDERLANDS
   PORTUGUÊS
   SUOMI
   SVENSKA
   SWAHILI
   TÜRKÇE
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency

G8: Poverty Reduction and Climate Change Inextricably Linked, Say Activists
By Moyiga Nduru
JOHANNESBURG - In the final hours before this week's Group of Eight (G8) summit gets underway in Germany, activists have underscored the need for progress with both climate change and poverty alleviation - key items on the meeting's agenda - for there to be real improvement in Africa's living conditions.
MORE >>
 

ECONOMY-KENYA: Buying Airtime to Chat About Poverty
By Joyce Mulama
NAIROBI - In an election year, it's undoubtedly something that Kenyan officials hoping to regain power will be pointing to: steady economic growth during President Mwai Kibaki's first term in office.
MORE >>
 

MAY DAY-KENYA: Export Processing Zones Still a Bone of Contention
By Joyce Mulama
NAIROBI - With working conditions around the world set to be placed in the spotlight on May Day (May 1), Emily Mugo has an axe to grind about her place of employment - in one of Kenya's Export Processing Zones (EPZs).
MORE >>
 

Q&A: "You Can't Kill Journalism"
Interview with Wilf Mbanga
JOHANNESBURG - Zimbabwean publisher and editor Wilf Mbanga will mark this year's World Press Freedom Day (May 3) in Britain, along with several other reporters from his country who have fled the repressive regime of President Robert Mugabe. As the political and economic difficulties gripping Zimbabwe have intensified, so have government's efforts to clamp down on journalists covering the crisis.
MORE >>
 

KENYA: New Health Rules a Challenge to Implement - More Costly to Ignore
By Joyce Mulama
NAIROBI - Just two months remain before the international community is scheduled to take a critical step forward in addressing global health threats, marked by the entry into force of the updated 'International Health Regulations'.
MORE >>
 

TRADE: Poor Infrastructure Undermines Food Safety in West Africa
By Meghan Sapp
BRUSSELS - A container ship is docked at Ghana's Tema port, stuffed to the brim with frozen food products, including thousands of metric tonnes of poultry parts recently arrived from Brazil. These are unloaded into cold storage facilities until they can be transported to the capital of Accra or elsewhere in the country.
MORE >>
 

TRADE: Europe Grapples With the Future of ACP Sugar Imports
By Meghan Sapp
BRUSSELS - The European Union (EU) has imported sugar at preferential prices from African, Caribbean and Pacific countries since the 1970s; but, failed sugar reform within the union and the prospect of unlimited imports from Least Developed Countries (LDCs) in the near future have put a question mark over this arrangement.
MORE >>
 

DEVELOPMENT-KENYA: Helping the Cotton Sector Turn Over a New Leaf
By Joyce Mulama
NAIROBI - Kenya's cotton industry, once one of the country's main foreign exchange earners, declined substantially following liberalisation of the sector in 1991.
MORE >>
 

WORLD SOCIAL FORUM: A Tale of Budget Crunches and Midnight Oil
By Joyce Mulama
NAIROBI - With just days to go before the seventh World Social Forum (WSF) kicks off in Nairobi it’s all systems go amongst the organisers, who are preparing to welcome thousands of delegates to the Kenyan capital for the Jan. 20-25 gathering.
MORE >>
 

WORLD SOCIAL FORUM: From the Burkinabé Countryside to Italian Tomato Fields
By Tiego Tiemtoré
OUAGADOUGOU - For Mady Daboné, Europe beckons. "Staying here...is misery," the 30-year-old from the village of Begdo in eastern Burkina Faso told IPS, adding that several of his friends were already abroad. "I have about twenty of them in Italy and Spain. They have all done well, even though they suffered at the beginning."
MORE >>
 

WORLD SOCIAL FORUM: On the Eve of the Nairobi Gathering, a Glance Back
By Almahady Cissé
BAMAKO - Almost a year ago, IPS interviewed a cross-section of people in Mali to gauge expectations for the African leg of the 2006 World Social Forum (WSF), held in Bamako. Certain interviewees were sceptical about whether the meeting could effect political and economic change; others proved more hopeful. So, were their expectations realised?
MORE >>
 

DEVELOPMENT-BURKINA FASO: Price Snags for Cotton Farmers
By Brahima Ouedraogo
OUAGADOUGOU - Some call it "white gold"; but, the ever-falling price of cotton means that this nickname may end up being more ironic than complimentary. In Burkina Faso cotton producers are, for the first time, facing the prospect of a third consecutive drop in the price of the commodity.
MORE >>
 

CHALLENGES 2006-2007: Angola's Oil Not Flowing for Safer Water
By Stephanie Nieuwoudt
NAIROBI - The cholera epidemic which has been plaguing Angola for nearly a year has placed the spotlight on the continuing lack of safe drinking water in that country.
MORE >>
 

 

<< Back

Next >>

 
RSS News Feeds RSS/XML
Make as home Make IPS News your homepage!
Free Newsletters Free Email Newsletters
IPS Mobile IPS Mobile
Text Only Text Only

World Environment Day 2005 in RSS Urban blight or urban bounty?
Cities consume 75 percent of the world's resources and spew three- fourths of its waste. Mayors from 71 cities -- from Cape Town to Copenhagen, Jakarta, and Zurich -- have had enough. Teaming up with the United Nations and San Francisco, host of this year's ''Green Cities'' World Environment Day commemoration, civic leaders are issuing a 21- point pact aimed at cutting, to zero by 2040, the amount of waste cities send to landfills while reducing electricity consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. Ambitious plans, to be sure, but organisers say they want every mayor on Earth to read the plan and say ''We can do these things.'' Will they?

News in RSS
Q&A: ‘Creating Artificial Glaciers Is Simple, Easy and Replicable’
INDIA: ‘Glacier Man’ Vows to Build More Artificial Glaciers
US-INDIA: State Visit by Singh Could Smooth Bumpy Relations
PERU: Fighting Hunger with Native Crops
RIGHTS-CHAGOS: 'My Navel is Buried There'
GENDER-AFRICA: Some Progress Amidst Continuing Challenges
AFGHANISTAN: Insurgents Infiltrate Security Forces
LEBANON: Migrant Women Dying on the Job
POLITICS: U.N. in Final Push for 2015 Development Goals
CLIMATE CHANGE: Health at Risk
More >>

  World Environment Day 2005
  Int'l Solid Waste Association
  UNEP Ozone Secretariat
  1st Int'l Conference on Air Pollution and Combustion
  UN-Habitat
  EU Urban Green Days

IPS is not responsible for the content of external sites