Sentences with phrase «turning over natural resources»

U.S. politicians on both sides of the aisle have cautioned Ottawa against turning over natural resources to a Chinese state - owned company.

Not exact matches

As natural resources bounced all over the charts in 2014, particularly gold, readers turned to the experts interviewed by The Gold Report for insights on what was driving these ups and downs and how they could protect themselves or, better yet, benefit from the volatility.
But the former Soviet Union gave neoliberals a free hand in turning land and natural resources over to insiders and slashing taxes on them — while imposing a stiff «flat tax» on labor's income.
Ahead of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee's vote tomorrow on Interior secretary nominee Ryan Zinke, the Montana Republican lawmaker disclosed to the committee that a super political action committee he was once affiliated with is under investigation and reaffirmed his opposition to turning federal lands over to states.
«With now four distinct species, the conservation status of each of these can be better defined and in turn added to the IUCN Red List,» Fennessy said in a statement, referring to the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources, which recently submitted a proposed assessment of the giraffe on the IUCN Red List, taking into consideration the animal's rapid decline over the last 30 years.
This idea armed environmentalists with the threat that a changing climate would suddenly — rather than over the course of millenia — reach a point where climate change was so rapid that natural processes on which human society depends would in turn collapse, leaving us starved of resources, and unable to cope with the new conditions.
The EPA used the report to monitor pesticides and determine which to regulate; environmental groups used it to look at chemicals that might turn up in water; the Natural Resources Defense Council used it to sue the EPA over pollution in Chesapeake Bay.
In 2015, the Movement provided training to over 200 rural women and community - based organizations who have in turn trained over 20,000 members of their communities in natural resource management and impacted thousands of others.
No longer short on cash, Kazakhstan can now afford high - priced lawyers, and the country has increasingly turned to Curtis Mallet to help it reassert some semblance of control over its natural resources.
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