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Blogs at Worldwatch

Each blog features regular contributions from Worldwatch researchers and outside experts on the global issues that the Institute tracks, from climate change negotiations to how to feed a growing population. We invite you to engage our bloggers in dialogue on the latest news and developments in their respective research areas.

 
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Energy Efficient Buildings in China: A Mixed Picture

Sino-Singapore Tianjin Eco-city (SSTEC), China’s latest and largest eco-city project, saw its first residents earlier this year. The city is built on a blend of non-arable saline and alkaline land that was virtually uninhabitable five years ago. While this is an accomplishment in and of itself, SSTEC is trying to go even greener in terms [...]

Getting to One-Planet Living

Worldwatch Institute’s State of the World 2013 explores new ways to measure sustainability and live within our planet’s boundaries Mobility for the human body, not the car. Photo courtesy of Jennie Moore. Washington, D.C.—As the world continues down the path of unmitigated and unsustainable development, it is becoming increasingly clear that we have successfully pushed [...]

Innovation of the Month: Cereal Banks Protect Against Famine and Empower Women Across the Sahel

By Caitlin Aylward Drought and high food prices in 2012 threatened the food security of over 18 million people in the Sahel Region of Africa, which includes parts of Chad, Niger, Mali, Mauritania, Burkina Faso, Senegal, Gambia, Cameroon, and northern Nigeria. The Sahel is prone to drought, and is becoming increasingly so with climate...

Growing Pains: Unclear Progress Towards the EU 2020 Renewable Energy Targets

The European Union (EU) has undoubtedly been one of the global leaders in spurring the advanced development and deployment of renewable energies worldwide. The vision set forth by the Renewable Energy Directive 2009/28/EC – a directive setting continent-wide targets for all EU-27 member states to increase their share of renewable energy in the...

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Energy Efficient Buildings in China: A Mixed Picture

Sino-Singapore Tianjin Eco-city (SSTEC), China’s latest and largest eco-city project, saw its first residents earlier this year. The city is built on a blend of non-arable saline and alkaline land that was virtually uninhabitable five years ago. While this is an accomplishment in and of itself, SSTEC is trying to go even greener in terms of...

Growing Pains: Unclear Progress Towards the EU 2020 Renewable Energy Targets

The European Union (EU) has undoubtedly been one of the global leaders in spurring the advanced development and deployment of renewable energies worldwide. The vision set forth by the Renewable Energy Directive 2009/28/EC – a directive setting continent-wide targets for all EU-27 member states to increase their share of renewable energy in the national...

Kenya’s Solar Lamp Market: Illuminating and Overcoming Institutional Voids

Starting and running a solar lamp retail business in a developing country like Kenya is no small feat. Kenya lacks strong transportation infrastructure for product distribution, and the bureaucratic red tape is not only tedious but can be opaque to foreigners. Meanwhile, the customers who need and want solar portable lamps most are those who can least afford it.
Solar portable...

Hundreds of Billions Now Flowing to Clean Energy

Having just returned from my second clean energy finance summit this year, I was relieved to find that despite the rumors, the renewable energy industries aren’t dying—indeed they’re booming.
Source: Michael Liebreich BNEF Summit Keynote, 23 April 2013
In 2012, according to...

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Innovation of the Month: Cereal Banks Protect Against Famine and Empower Women Across the Sahel

By Caitlin Aylward
Drought and high food prices in 2012 threatened the food security of over 18 million people in the Sahel Region of Africa, which includes parts of Chad, Niger, Mali, Mauritania, Burkina Faso, Senegal, Gambia, Cameroon, and northern Nigeria. The Sahel is prone to drought, and is becoming increasingly so with...

Camu Camu: A Little Fruit that Packs a Big Punch

By Eleanor Fausold
Sometimes the best things come in small packages. Camu camu (Myrciaria dubia) is a tiny fruit native to the Amazon region of South America that is rising in popularity, as both an element in local treats and a main component in dietary supplements. Although its high level of acidity once...

EU Bans Class of Pesticides Thought Harmful to Bees

By Laura Reynolds
On April 29, the European Union voted to largely ban the use of neonicotinoids, a type of pesticide, for two years beginning in December 2013. The ban had 15 member state supporters, including France, Germany, and Poland; eight opponents, including...

Emissions from Agriculture and Livestock Continue to Grow

By Laura Reynolds
In 2010, global greenhouse gas emissions from the agricultural sector totaled 4.7 billion tons of carbon dioxide (CO₂) equivalent, up 13 percent over 1990. Agriculture is the third largest contributor to global emissions by sector, following the burning of fossil fuels for power and heat, and transportation. In 2010, emissions from electricity and heat production reached 12.5 billion tons, and emissions from transport totaled 6.7 billion...

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Videos by Farmers, for Farmers to Adapt to a Warmer World

Indian women tending vegetable plots (CIAT via Flickr)
At this juncture, the scientific consensus on climate change is pretty clear: the world is warming, we’re causing it, and it’s going to get a lot worse for a lot of people a lot quicker than we thought. Given the progressively more...

Getting to One-Planet Living

Worldwatch Institute’s State of the World 2013 explores new ways to measure sustainability and live within our planet’s boundaries
Mobility for the human body, not the car. Photo courtesy of Jennie Moore.
Washington, D.C.—As the world continues down the path of unmitigated and unsustainable development, it is becoming...

Just One Word: Plastics

In the March online issue of Nature, a group of scientists argued plastic should be treated as hazardous waste. They specifically urge the biggest producers—USA, Europe and Japan—to take measures to modify the current production and consumption trends. In the US, the EPA estimates 45 percent of plastics are used as containers and packaging, and that only 12 percent of these are recycled. In...

State of the World 2013 Launch and Seminar Report

by Katerina Batzaki
Copenhagen
On the day that Worldwatch Institute launched State of the World 2013: Is Sustainability Still Possible? 69,578 cyclists crossed the Dronning Louise Bridge into the centre of Copenhagen providing a very simple answer to that very weighty environmental question. Of course sustainability is possible, if we make sustainable choices. In the Danish capital, hundreds of thousands...

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Worldwatch Multimedia

Discover Worldwatch by watching our researchers report from the field, listening to their latest speeches and presentations, and viewing their photography.

Alexander Ochs Discusses Central America Project

 

Robert Engelman discusses the obstacles in tackling climate change at the BSR Conference 2012.

 

Robert Engelman Talks Climate Change on RT's The Big Picture with Thom Hartmann

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