Well aware of the stigma the oilsands brings to the nation’s reputation, Environment Minister Jim Prentice has spoken up and stated the obvious. He warns that Canada is in danger of becoming a “global poster child for environmentally unsound resource development” and says the industry must change its ways.
With recent stimulus plans providing incentive to shift towards a greener economy and with many nations establishing eco-friendly goals for the future, the race is on to become the world’s greenest nation. To actually compare and rank so many varied and intricate ‘entities’ seems an impossible feat. But researchers at Yale and Columbia Universities have done just that.
As a new decade begins, we look back on the first ten years of the 21st century and try to wrap our minds around its events and catch our breath after its rapid pace.
A boycott, led by African representatives and supported by China and India, effectively halted talks Monday, with developing nations refusing to participate until wealthy nations discussed much greater reductions in their GHG emissions.
The decision is in: the jobs of the future must be green – economically and ecologically. This past Saturday the Good Green Jobs for All Conference took place in Toronto.