Sustainability

Sort by

    • thumbnail

      Motivated by a Tax, Irish Spurn Plastic Bags

      Posted by Jon from New York Times

      In 2002, Ireland passed a tax on plastic bags; customers who want them must now pay 33 cents per bag at the register. There was an advertising awareness campaign. And then something happened that was bigger than the sum of these parts. Within weeks, plastic bag use dropped 94 percent. Within a year, nearly everyone had bought reusable cloth bags, keeping them in offices and in the backs of cars. Plastic bags were not outlawed, but carrying them became socially unacceptable.

      Read comments (1)

    • Business struggles with sustainability

      Posted by SoxFirst

      The good news is that sustainability is on the boardroom agenda. The bad news is that business doesn't know what to do about it. A new study shows business thinks promoting sustainability is great for reputation and public relations. The trouble is, it does not seem to do much for the bottom line.

      Post a comment

    • thumbnail

      2010 And Sustainability: On Your Mark, Get Set, Plummet

      Posted by Orato

      So what do you think about holding the “greenest Games ever”? Well, there’s a good chance that you haven’t even heard of the Vancouver Olympic and Paralympic Games being particularly green. And if you have, you probably realize that sustainability and Olympics have been associated more with being oxymorons than true companions. Plus, there’s another unsustainable factor looming...

      Post a comment

    • thumbnail

      Sustaintability and insurance risks

      Posted by SoxFirst

      Climate change might be the most serious environmental risk facing society and insurers but there are many other big ones ahead. They include insurance for the poor, protection of natural resources, health, lifelong income and emerging threats like nanotechnology.

      Post a comment

    • Sustainability reporting: carrots and sticks

      Posted by SoxFirst

      Once dismissed as fuzzy and meaningless work from greenies, sustainability reporting seems to be gaining some traction in boardrooms with the release of the latest Global Reporting Initiative. The new G3 guidelines have the support of business leaders who are calling on their peers to adopt them.

      Post a comment

« Previous1Next »


What is

NewsCloud?

» The most important stories from around the Web all in one place

» Gathered and ranked by a community of passionate readers surfing the Web 24 hours a day

» Ready to share: email stories, post news to your blog and keep up with your friends

Learn more



  • Just Said
  • Top Posters
  •  
  1. thumbnail

    sunfarstar comments on:

    In U.S., Metal Theft Plagues Troubled Neighborhoods

    hi. i am sunfarstar,from china shanghai.

    Reply »

    6:41 am 4/15/08
  2. thumbnail

    Damianmann comments on:

    In U.S., Metal Theft Plagues Troubled Neighborhoods

    Jackie…

     

    There’s gotta be a better way than MORE government involvement.

     

     

    Although, it would be kind of fun if Juniour declared a war on it.

    Reply »

    12:45 am 4/12/08
  3. thumbnail

    jhand47201 comments on:

    In U.S., Metal Theft Plagues Troubled Neighborhoods

    when the cops caught the guy he picked up to go see the body he was telling everyone about it the guy denied he was ever with the "witness" that night. the cops got the security cam video from the drive up window at the burger place that showed them together. the confession followed.

    Reply »

    6:38 pm 4/11/08
  4. thumbnail

    jhand47201 comments on:

    In U.S., Metal Theft Plagues Troubled Neighborhoods

    recently two idiots were going to take the aluminum from a high voltage power line tower. the moron who volunteered to cut the live wires with a bolt cutter died. his buddy left him there to go get another friend to look at the body. of course they had to stop for burgers and fries first. they all got caught fortunately. i think the fault lies with the scrap yard operators. when a person comes in with new copper piping that is in new condition and looks like it is a house worth they should be suspicious. same with structural material. i think they can get away with buying and selling stolen material too easily. the past few weeks have had people caught cutting catalytic converters out from under people’s cars at their homes and in parking lots using a battery powered saw.

    Reply »

    3:55 pm 4/11/08
  5. thumbnail

    sunbal87 comments on:

    In U.S., Metal Theft Plagues Troubled Neighborhoods

    value analysis technique substituted pvc for copper in piping.may be in every application of rich copper, cheaper material substitution should be answer by technology for ugly human thieves of copper products.

    sundarrajan balaji

    sunbal87

    Reply »

    11:44 am 4/09/08
  6. thumbnail

    Jackieboy comments on:

    In U.S., Metal Theft Plagues Troubled Neighborhoods

    Have the Ones that buy the metals verify the sourse of the metals. This will decrease the market selling value. Also have a 2 ID checks on anyone coming to sell and all reported to local county governments. Make it a crime for interstate transport without proper authorization and charge for this authorization service. This would also decrease the profits of the Theives. You can always get a permit to do the business with heavy fines for infractions. The Driving Force is Money make the county governments take a share to Police it. Jack

    Reply »

    6:00 am 4/09/08
  7. thumbnail

    Jeff comments on:

    In U.S., Metal Theft Plagues Troubled Neighborhoods

    Or perhaps metal detectors ;)

    Reply »

    5:28 pm 4/08/08
  • Just Said
  • Top Posters
  •  
  1. thumbnail

    Jeff

    Member since Jul 2008

    Jeff is the founder of NewsCloud. He is also a freelance writer and blogs at Idealog.

    Seattle


  2. thumbnail

    devolved

    Member since Jul 2008

    Dropped out of the rat race, but possibly still a rat… Now viewing the world from Down Under.

    Melbourne