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Conservation and environmental news & publications: Sweden

No more EU-trophication

No more EU-trophication! How CAP reform can save the Baltic Sea

In the last 150 years, the Baltic Sea has developed from a pristine, nutrient-poor, clear water sea to permanent eutrophic conditions. A key factor in the environmental degradation of the BalticSea is the intensification of agriculture – much of it in the last 50 years – in the surrounding drainage basin.

Posted on 08 July 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

Marine dead zones – a growing problem globally and in the Baltic Sea

The global science community is watching the problem of oxygen depletion in marine and coastal areas with growing concern. Over the last few years the number of known dead zones globally has increased from 44 in 1995 to 169 according to a recent report from the World Resource Institute (WRI).

Posted on 09 June 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

Estonian green beef anyone?

Grazing the birds back to coastal Estonia

Millions of migratory birds benefit from Estonian coasts that have been restored by cattle with large appetites for grass.

Posted on 30 April 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

Climate Witness, Penina Moce

Climate Witnesses support Earth Hour

Individuals witnessing the impacts of climate change on their local environments and communities encourage people around the world to join the global Earth Hour movement and switch off on 29 March 2008.

Posted on 25 March 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

The  Mediterranean's tuna fleet needs to shed a third of its vessels to fish within the law, and even more to save bluefin stocks according to scientific advice - but 25 new boats are currently under construction

Bloated Mediterranean tuna fleet in race for the last bluefin

Rome, Italy – The most comprehensive analysis yet of the Mediterranean bluefin tuna fleet shows it conservatively having twice the fishing capacity of current quotas and more than three and a half times the catch levels recommended by scientists to avoid stock collapse.

Posted on 12 March 2008 | 4 comments | Read more

Severely degraded mangroves due to rising sea levels and clearing for commercial shrimp and salt farms, Thailand. These factors have contributed greatly to the destruction of large tracts of coastal mangroves in the country.

This time, world should heed OECD call to action on environment

Paris: The OECD’s Environment Outlook to 2030, issued today, was welcomed by WWF as yet another compelling argument that the costs of inaction on the environment will far exceed the costs of action. 

The OECD Outlook is the latest - and at 520 pages one of the weightiest - in a run of reports from prominent economic institutions and commissions calling on governments and international institutions to face up to the seriousness and immediacy of global environmental problems.

Posted on 05 March 2008 | 2 comments | Read more

This new community allows young people to tell the world why they care about the environment and why it should be protected.

A new platform to start changing the world

Forget Facebook, MySpace or You Tube: here comes connect2earth, a new online community where young people can upload videos, pictures and comments about the environment.

On www.connect2earth.org, users and visitors will be able to write, speak, illustrate and video present their concerns on subjects important to them, and share environmental ideas and solutions.

Posted on 04 March 2008 | 3 comments | Read more

WWF points out that the over-exploitation of fossil fuels - such as coal, gas and oil - is putting the whole of humanity under threat from climate change.

HP commits to further GHG emissions reductions in joining WWF Climate Savers

HP, one of the world's largest IT companies, has pledged to reduce the emissions from its own operations and the use of its products to 6 million tonnes below 2005 levels by 2010.

Posted on 13 February 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

Mediterranean bluefin tuna — highly prized around the world, especially in Japan for sushi and sashimi — has been under increasing pressure from overfishing. Display of frozen tunas to be auctioned at the Tsukiji fish market, Tokyo, Japan.

Join retailers’ Mediterranean bluefin tuna boycott, urges WWF

As more and more major European retailers boycott Mediterranean Bluefin Tuna, WWF used the occasion of the Barcelona Seafood Summit to call on more to join the ban until the imperilled species is out of the danger zone.

Posted on 28 January 2008 | 1 comments | Read more

According to WWF's Living Planet Report, humanity’s Ecological Footprint – the demand people place upon the natural world – has increased to the point where the Earth is unable to keep up in the struggle to regenerate.

EU economies living beyond ecological means

The growing economic strength of the European Union has doubled the ecological pressure on the planet in the past 30 years, according to a new WWF report.

Posted on 19 November 2007 | 0 comments | Read more

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