Tierramerica
Life forms react in surprising ways to pressures of all kinds, says transgender biologist Brigitte Baptiste - Juan José Carrillo/IPS

Climate Change Is Affecting Traditional Knowledge

Colombia has no system for monitoring biodiversity to determine how it could be affected by global warming, Brigitte Baptiste of the Humboldt Institute, a Colombian government institution devoted to biodiversity, reports in this exclusive interview.

Ecobreves – BRAZIL: Despite Forest Management, Logging Leads to Financial Losses

Even when sustainable management regulations and logging cycles established by the law are strictly followed, logging causes irreversible losses in the productive value of Amazon forests, according to a study by the Luiz de Queiroz Higher School of Agriculture at the University of São Paulo.

Ecobreves – VENEZUELA: Used Batteries Collected on Margarita Island

An environmental group from Margarita Island, located in the Caribbean Sea off the northeast coast of Venezuela, has launched a campaign to collect used batteries from the island’s 400,000 inhabitants and the hundreds of thousands of tourists who visit every year.

Ecobreves – HONDURAS: Firefighters Plant Trees in the Capital

A contingent of 25 members of the Tegucigalpa Fire Department has joined the government initiative to plant 200,000 trees in the Honduran capital and three neighboring municipalities over the next six months.

Ecobreves – CUBA: Zeolites Increase Agricultural Yields

The use of natural zeolites in agriculture increases crop yields while minimizing environmental impacts, new Cuban research has found.

Students tending the garden at the school in San Cristóbal Totonicapán.  Credit: Courtesy of FAO/Guatemala

School Gardens Promote Learning While Fighting Hunger

"Yesterday I planted 20 broccoli plants at home. God willing, they will grow and we will be able to eat them," said 12-year-old Juan Francisco Ordóñez, a student at a school in San Cristóbal Totonicapán where a school garden has been established in an attempt to alleviate hunger.

Fishermen arrive at the dock near the Castillo de Jagua Fortress in Cienfuegos.  Credit: Jorge Luis Baños/IPS

CUBA: Petrochemical Complex Poses Major Environmental Challenge

As it gears up for the creation of a major petrochemical complex of regional scope, this Cuban city faces the challenge of ensuring the sustainability of development that could compromise the health of the Bay of Cienfuegos, its main natural resource.

Fishermen arrive at the dock near the Castillo de Jagua Fortress in Cienfuegos. - Jorge Luis Baños/IPS

Petrochemical Complex Poses Major Environmental Challenge

Cuba is preparing a series of environmental measures to protect the Bay of Cienfuegos from the upcoming expansion of its oil refinery.

 - Claudius

After Peak Oil, Peak Globalization

The reality of a globalized economy seems to be that poverty is its only sustainable phenomenon, says entrepreneur Gunter Pauli in this column.

Ecobreves – ARGENTINA: Relocation of Electric Power Substation Demanded

Environmental and social organizations in the Argentine city of Berazategui are calling for the relocation of an electric power substation to a less populated area and legislation on the placement of these facilities.

Ecobreves – MEXICO: Anti-Transgenic Food Campaign

Greenpeace Mexico has a launched a computer application called "Clean Out Your Cupboards" to help consumers avoid industrially processed and genetically modified foods.

Ecobreves – BRAZIL: Logging Threatens 7,000 Square Kilometers in the Amazon

The Amazon could lose another 7,000 square kilometers of forests by July 2012, according to a report on the risk of deforestation released by the Amazon Institute of People and the Environment (Imazon).

Ecobreves – HONDURAS: Geologists Warn of Landslide Risks in Capital

Four marginalized neighborhoods in Tegucigalpa are at "high risk" of facing major landslides during the rainy season, a team of geologists from Costa Rica concluded after a three-week study in Honduras.

The water quality of the Guaíba River, which runs through Porto Alegre, is classified as poor.  Credit: Clarinha Glock/IPS

BRAZIL: Efforts to Improve Water Quality Falling Short

Despite increased spending on sanitation works, the water quality in rivers near large urban centers in Brazil ranges from poor to very poor. Some say the reason is the development model chosen by the South American nation.

The water quality of the Guaíba River, which runs through Porto Alegre, is classified as poor. - Clarinha Glock/IPS

Investments Are Not Improving Water Quality in Brazil

Rivers near Brazil’s most populated cities have poor or very poor water quality, according to a government report, although 71 percent of the country’s water resources are in good condition.

Volunteers campaigning in Reykjavik. - Lowana Veal/IPS

New Push to Get Whales Off the Table

A campaign directed at tourists visiting Iceland aims to show them that, contrary to what they are led to believe by some restaurants, whale meat is not a traditional dish enjoyed by most Icelanders.

Ecobreves – VENEZUELA: Trade Unionists Denounce Smelter Pollution

Workers at the state-owned Venalum aluminum smelter in the northeastern Venezuelan city of Guayana report that because of a lack of repairs to the plant’s treatment facilities, toxic gases like toluene and benzene are being directly released into the atmosphere.

Ecobreves – BRAZIL: Organic Produce Consumption on the Rise

The consumption of organic produce is growing by between 20 and 30 percent a year in Brazil, according to the Ministry of Agrarian Development (MDA).

Ecobreves – HONDURAS: Timber Industry Calls for Government Transparency

The Timber Association of Honduras has demanded more transparency from the government in its measures to protect the forests and the activities and expenditures carried out by the Armed Forces through the so-called green battalions.

Slash-and-burn clearing in the rainforest in the state of Acre, next to Amazonas.  Credit: Mario Osava/IPS

BRAZIL: Small-Scale Land Speculators Contribute to Amazon Deforestation

Many migrants from southern Brazil who clear forests in Brazil’s state of Amazonas are making their living as small-scale land speculators and not as farmers or as cattle ranchers, new research has found.

Wind farm in Oaxaca, Mexico.  Credit: Mauricio Ramos/IPS

Computers Help Create a Clean Energy Future

The use of information technology in energy planning can contribute not only to developing renewable energy sources but also to moving towards a green economy.

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