Finalists of the Earthshot Prize Awards at the green carpet at Earthshot Week 2023 at Mediacorp Campus on Nov 7.in a bid to protect the ailing planet. Each year, it recognises five exemplary projects that work on solving key environmental issues.They were picked from a pool of 15 finalists by The Earthshot Prize Council. There is one winner under each of the five categories: creating a waste-free world, cleaning the air, fixing the climate, reviving oceans, and protecting and restoring nature.
Found at altitudes of 3,500m to 5,000m, the forests comprise mainly slow-growing Polylepis trees that capture water from glacial run-off and moisture from mist rising from the cloud forests below. Loss of these forests has caused farmland to become infertile and water supplies to dry up, affecting the livelihoods of many.Since 2018, almost 10 million native trees have been planted across five countries. More than 4,000ha of Andean forests have been restored and more than 11,000ha of native forests are protected from destruction.
Indonesia’s Misool Marine Reserve is a crucial habitat for 1,500 species of fish. WildAid helps fishermen find alternative livelihoods in tourism and aquaculture. PHOTO: MISOOL FOUNDATION/FACEBOOK This would be crucial as the world has a 30 by 30 target of safeguarding 30 per cent of land and oceans by 2030, in a bid to curb biodiversity loss.WildAid is looking to expand its work from the current 96 MPAs and coastal fishery zones to 250 in the next five years.Toxic solvents and adhesives are used in the production of lithium-ion batteries. GRST has come up with a cleaner manufacturing process for these batteries.
All binding materials are water-soluble. This means the used batteries can be dunked in water and the black mass recovered immediately. The batteries also cost 5 per cent less to produce than conventional batteries.GRST says its production process consumes 35 per cent less energy than conventional methods, and its use of low-carbon footprint materials would bring about a 40 per cent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.
Boomitra uses remote sensing technology to monitor, report and verify the amount of carbon, nutrients and moisture in the soil.
Singapore Latest News, Singapore Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Source: ChannelNewsAsia - 🏆 6. / 66 Read more »
Source: ChannelNewsAsia - 🏆 6. / 66 Read more »
Source: ChannelNewsAsia - 🏆 6. / 66 Read more »
Source: IndependentSG - 🏆 2. / 72 Read more »
Source: straits_times - 🏆 5. / 69 Read more »