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POPSEarth on course for Eco 'Crunch' Consumerism should be not just frowned upon or out of fashion, but seen as disgusting. This is something we as individuals are responsible for- and can do something about!
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POPSEarth on course for eco 'crunch' This problem is being pushed to the side by economic problems by governments. Spend the way out of trouble building jobs in a more environmentally friendly framework. Provide the retraining needed desperately by those thrown out of work, and give it sensibly.
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POPSForever Is A Long Time- Extinction Of Too Many Watch the slide show attached. Great sadness for the losses incurred and those that are coming in your lifetime. We are a destructive force and our role as caretakers of the world around us is not well exercised.
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POPSGebana - Fairtrade Bio Produkte und Bio Lebensmittel Seit dreissig Jahren ist die gebana Pionierin im fairen Handel. Sie unterstützt Kleinbauern in Südamerika, West- und Nordafrika bei der Produktion von nachhaltigen und biologisch angebauten Lebensmitteln. Diese importiert und vertreibt sie ohne Zwischenhandel direkt an die europäischen Konsumenten. Dafür wird die gebana vom WWF regelmässig mit der Höchstnote „sehr empfehlenswert“ ausgezeichnet.
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POPSChina; a climate saint or sinner? For instance, the study says China runs an "ecological deficit" with the rest of the world, because its footprint is twice its land area. By that assessment, it is a worse offender than some much richer countries that use more resources per head but have larger land areas - including the US.
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POPS Arctic Ice Pack Diminishing With about a third of the world’s population—and 25 percent of Americans—living within 300 feet of an ocean coastline, sea level rise is a big deal. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, made up of leading climate scientists, sea levels have risen some 3.1 millimeters per year since 1993. The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) reports that low-lying island nations, especially in equatorial regions, have been hardest hit by this phenomenon, and some are threatened with total disappearance. Rising seas have already swallowed up two uninhabited islands in the Central Pacific. On Samoa, thousands of residents have moved to higher ground as shorelines have retreated by as much as 160 feet. And islanders on Tuvalu are scrambling to find new homes as salt water intrusion has made their groundwater undrinkable while increasingly strong hurricanes and ocean swells have devastated shoreline structures.
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POPS瀕臨絕種生物資料庫 http://energy-efficiency.qed.hkedcity.net/Kit3/Kit3M6/index_K3M6_species.htm