In The News

September 27, 2015
Palm oil farmers in Malaysia and Indonesia continue to set fires to clear land, with some getting out of control. A blanket of smog creeps over the region, drifting into Singapore and Malaysia. Singapore, a source of investment funds for the plantations, has passed laws allowing complaints about the foreign fires to be considered in its courts. “ASEAN was designed precisely to foster the kind of...
Jeff Plungis and Dana Hull September 25, 2015
A university lab in West Virginia, a state known for coal-mining and rejecting clean-air regulations, conducted exhaust tests that have rattled Volkswagen and a marketing strategy on “clean” diesel. Volkswagen is based in Germany, a country that promotes policies to protect the environment and stem climate change. The International Council on Clean Transportation had wanted to show European...
Joseph Chamie September 22, 2015
Population growth is linked to conflict, water shortages and resource depletion, climate change and mass migrations. The global population is now 7.3 billion people, up from 2.5 billion in 1950, and is expected to swell to near 11 billion by the end of the century. World leaders convene this week at the United Nations and prepare to adopt new Sustainable Development Goals for 2030. The draft...
Alister Doyle September 17, 2015
A study by the World Wildlife Fund and the Zoological Society of London suggests that ocean fish stocks have decreased by half since 1970. The decline is linked to over-fishing, mismanagement and climate change. “Damage to coral reefs and mangroves, which are nurseries for many fish, add to problems led by over-fishing,” reports Alistair Doyle for Reuters. “The study said the world's fishing...
Renee Juliene Karunungan September 7, 2015
Less developed countries use just a fraction of the world’s fossil fuels and advocates are making plans to be “compensated for loss and damage from extreme events by rich [countries] mostly responsible for greenhouse gas-caused climate change,” writes Renee Juliene Karunungan for the Asia Sentinel. The world’s largest emitters are China, the United States, Brazil and India. The issue was raised...
Halimah Abdullah and M. Alex Johnson September 2, 2015
The effects of climate change – rising seas, depleted water supplies, burned landscapes and volatile weather patterns that contribute to mass migration, refugees and conflict – won’t be easy for future generations to repair. Foreign ministers of key Arctic and non-Arctic nations with an interest met in Alaska for a three-day conference intended to drive political will and momentum to stem...
Nicola Abé, Jens Glüsing, Felix Lill, Michaela Schiessl, Samiha Shafy and Helene Zuber August 20, 2015
The world is depleting its supply of freshwater, which represents 2.5 percent of the overall water supply. “The world's population has almost tripled since 1950, but water consumption has increased six-fold,” writes a team for Spiegel Online. The report reviews wasteful practices in Brazil, California, Spain and efforts to privatize water markets in Bolivia and Germany. About 70 percent of...