Creativity and perseverance for a sustainable future
The pollution caused by marine plastic litter has generated global attention in recent years.At the G20 Osaka Summit in June, countries agreed to take str…
Source: www.japantimes.co.jp
The pollution caused by marine plastic litter has generated global attention in recent years.At the G20 Osaka Summit in June, countries agreed to take str…
Source: www.japantimes.co.jp
The circular economy offers OEMs in the enterprise technology market new revenue streams, improved sustainability and enhanced brand protection. By outsourcing downstream processes, including reverse logistics, repair services, de-manufacturing, warehousing and IT asset disposition, manufacturers can maximize product value and free up their resources to focus on new innovations. Today’s technology manufacturing landscape is one of balance between meeting consumer hyper-demands for “the next big thing” and carefully managing finite resources. The circular economy is a global movement that attempts to strike that balance through reverse logistics, repair strategies and sustainable reuse. Original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) participating in the circular economy are leveraging sustainable practices to extend product lifecycles and capture value long after the initial product sale.
Read more about It’s up to next generation to abolish single-use plastics: Harsh Vardhan on Business Standard.The union minister launched an anthem as a part of a campaign to make India plastic-free by 2020…
Cities, villages and towns in Dane County are pledging to work together on environmentally-friendly projects.
Five Pacific Northwest coffee companies share why their approach to sustainability begins by building fair relationships with farmers.
Most people hate plastics. Similarly, most people love nature (sunsets, the beach, walks or drives through the woods, especially for leaf peeping, flowers, furry animals, etc.), but also hate nature (hurricanes, tornadoes, jellyfish, biting insects, spiders, snakes, skunks, ragweed, fallen leaves to clean up, etc.). It depends on which plastics and which experience of nature we are talking about…
There is a patchwork of recycling programs and policies across Canada because provinces have jurisdiction over recycling, and each has built its own system. While no two systems are the same, they all strive for positive economic and environmental outcomes.