«New York City officials claim it is more expensive to recycle than to send trash to landfills and incinerators for disposal, and that they have to weigh those costs
against environmental goals.»
Not exact matches
Exxon has argued
against all the other shareholder proposals as well, including a «policy to explicitly prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity»; a policy articulating Exxon's «respect for and commitment to the human right to water»; «a report discussing possible long term risks to the company's finances and operations posed by the
environmental, social and economic challenges associated with the oil sands»; a report of «known and potential
environmental impacts» and «policy options» to address the impacts of the company's «fracturing operations»; a report of recommendations on how Exxon can become an «environmentally sustainable energy company»; and adoption of «quantitative
goals... for reducing total greenhouse gas emissions.»
However, the push to extend lifelines to nuclear power has collided with the
goals of other
environmental activists who have spent decades railing
against reactors as expensive and unsafe, creating cracks in the coalition that helped bring nations to an international agreement to fight climate change.
Category: Africa, End Poverty and Hunger, English,
Environmental Sustainability, global citizenship education, Global Partnership, Millennium Development
Goals, NGO, North America, Private Institution, Public Institution, Voluntary Association · Tags: CIVICUS, CONCORD, DEEEP, GCAP, Global Call to Action
against Poverty, global citizens, global movement, Johannesburg, learning, poverty, solidarity, the world we want, World Alliance for Citizens
Category: Africa, Asia, Central America, Child Health, Combat HIV / AIDS, End Poverty and Hunger, English,
Environmental Sustainability, Europe, Gender Equality, global citizenship education, Global Partnership, Maternal Health, Millennium Development
Goals, North America, Oceania, Refugee and displaced, South America, Transversal Studies, Universal Education, Your experiences, Your ideas · Tags: adults, alternatives, children, children educational settings, Convention on the Rights of the Child, disabilities, educational process, Egypt, Environment, Gender, girls, Global Education Magazine, Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children, Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children reports, human rights - based approach to education, ILO, Indigenous, indigenous development, International Year for the Culture of Peace's, marginalized, non-discrimination, non-violence, peace, role play, School Day of Non-violence and Peace, Scientific and Cultural Organization, skills, students, Sub-Saharan Africa, Sudan, Teacher's Guide to End Violence in Schools, teachers, UN Educational, UNICEF, United Nations, violence, Violence
Against Children, Violence in schools and educational settings, WHO, women
Category: Africa, Asia, Central America, Child Health, Combat HIV / AIDS, End Poverty and Hunger, English,
Environmental Sustainability, Europe, Gender Equality, global citizenship education, Global Partnership, Maternal Health, Mercosur, Middle East, Millennium Development
Goals, NGO, North America, Oceania, Private Institution, Public Institution, Refugee and displaced, South America, Transversal Studies, Universal Education, Voluntary Association, Your experiences, Your ideas · Tags: 23rd Century, awareness, Che Guevara, Climate Change, Colombia, Eduardo Galeano, Education, El Salvador, Environment,
Environmental,
Environmental Sustainability, extreme poverty, future, future we want, FW de Klerk, GCAP, Global Call to Action
against Poverty, Global Citizens Movement, global citizenship, global citizenship education, Global Education Magazine, Human Rights, Human Rights Education, human rights - based approach to education, human traffic, humanism, humanity, Iberoamérica, José Martí, Latin America, Luther King, Marta Benavides, Mercosur, Mexico, Nelson Mandela, Nobel Peace Prize, Peacebuilding, poverty, rural areas, Siglo XXIII, Simón Bolivar, social change, Social Development, solidarity, South Africa, South America, sustainable development, UNESCO, UNHCR, United Nations, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, women, Women Rights, world, World Future Society, World we want, worldlogy
The Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs or Global
Goals) offer a new framework
against which your business can align, measure and explain its actions to operate more responsibly and deliver positive social,
environmental and economic impacts.
The point of coastal management is not to pit
environmental and social
goals against one other, but rather forge a degree of sustainable compatibility.
Those who choose to go Climate Neutral with a Climate + Care programme will also be able to channel their support to projects that cut carbon and deliver
against your priority social and
environmental goals in locations that make sense for your business.