Showing posts with label government. Show all posts
Showing posts with label government. Show all posts

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Hong Kong News: KS Wong visits Sweden (08 March 2014)


KS Wong visits Sweden

Going green
Going green:  Secretary for the Environment KS Wong speaks at a luncheon, introducing Hong Kong's environmental policies and works.

March 08, 2014
Secretary for the Environment KS Wong met officials and visited waste-management facilities in Sweden yesterday.

He toured a waste-to-energy plant in Malmö, which uses moving grate technology to treat 1,500 tonnes of waste per day and generate heat and electricity for neighboring areas.

Mr Wong also addressed a luncheon meeting and exchanged views with local officials on waste management policies and infrastructure, before departing for Hong Kong in the afternoon.


source from: http://www.news.gov.hk/en/categories/environment/html/2014/03/20140308_092243.shtml

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Hong Kong News: KS Wong visits Denmark (07 March 2014)


KS Wong visits Denmark

Experience sharing
Experience sharing:  Secretary for the Environment KS Wong meets Denmark's Minister of the Environment Kirsten Brosbol.

March 07, 2014
Secretary for the Environment KS Wong met officials and inspected waste-management facilities in Copenhagen yesterday.

He called on Copenhagen Technical & Environmental Mayor Morten Kabell and Denmark's Minister of the Environment Kirsten Brosbol.

He was briefed on the development of the Amager Bakke Waste-to-Energy Plant project, which will employ moving-grate technology to treat 1,500 tonnes of waste per day when it is commissioned in 2017.

He then addressed a luncheon meeting, and met with Hong Kong students studying in Denmark.

Mr Wong later visited the newly commissioned Roskilde Waste-to-Energy Plant, which provides electricity, heating and cooling processes to suit the community's needs in different seasons.

Mr Wong will visit Sweden tomorrow.


source from: http://www.news.gov.hk/en/categories/environment/html/2014/03/20140307_174029.shtml

Hong Kong News: KS WOng visit the Netherlands (06 March 2014)


Fired up
Fired up:  Secretary for the Environment KS Wong (front row, centre) is briefed on the operation of the Afval Energie Bedrijf Waste Fired Power Plant in Amsterdam.

KS Wong visits the Netherlands

March 06, 2014
Secretary for the Environment KS Wong inspected thermal waste treatment facilities in the Netherlands yesterday, and met local officials and environmental experts.

Mr Wong visited Amsterdam's Afval Energie Bedrijf Waste Fired Power Plant, the world's largest waste-to-energy facility, which treats 4,400 tonnes of garbage per day using moving-grate technology.

It generates power and heat for the city, and extracts metals for recycling after waste treatment. The proposed waste-to-energy facility in Shek Kwu Chau, Hong Kong, will treat 3,000 tonnes of waste per day using the same technology.

Mr Wong then attended a luncheon meeting with the city’s Vice Mayor Carolien Gehrels and other officials to discuss environmental issues.

He later met Secretary General of the Ministry of Infrastructure & Environment Siebe Riedstra and environmental experts in The Hague.

Mr Wong will visit Denmark tomorrow


source from: http://www.news.gov.hk/en/categories/environment/html/2014/03/20140306_144356.shtml

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

China News: Beijing gov't criticized for ongoing smog (17 Feb 2014)

Beijing gov't criticized for ongoing smog

Xinhua, February 17, 2014
Heavy smog in Beijing lasting for days has triggered public criticism over the municipal government's inaction.
At 8 p.m. Sunday, the air quality index (AQI) at monitoring stations in the city's downtown areas read between 342 and 414 and was rated at Level 6, the highest level, indicating hazardous pollution, according to the Beijing Municipal Environmental Monitoring Center's website.
Heavy smog shrouds Beijing on Feb. 14.  
The business channel of the China Central Television (CCTV) late on Saturday questioned why the government failed to initiate an emergency response under such smoggy weather.
"Beijing municipal government, don't pretend to be blind in the fog," the channel said via its account on the Twitter-like Weibo.com. "The government should not shun its responsibility or turn a blind eye to the smog."
The channel tweeted twice on the matter in five minutes, and the post had been forwarded by netizens thousands of times as of Sunday morning.
Beijing is not the only region facing the suffocating air on Sunday. The National Meteorological Center issued a yellow alert at 6 a.m. Sunday, forecasting medium to serious haze in Beijing and nearby Tianjin Municipality and the provinces of Hebei, Shandong, Henan, Shanxi, and Shaanxi. It said smog would last until late Sunday, when a fresh wave of rain and snow would hit most of the country.
QUESTIONS OVER GOV'T INACTION
The Beijing municipal government approved and put into effect an emergency response system last October. The system requires that traffic be cut with alternate driving days for even- and odd-numbered license plates and schools suspended if a red alert, the highest level for air pollution, is issued. Industrial plants will be closed or told to reduce production and fireworks will be banned if an orange alert, the second-highest alert, is issued.
However, the government has not initiated the emergency response once since the program came into effect on Oct. 22, 2013, although the public has on several occasions complained of smog heavy enough to warrant a government response.
The government issued a blue alert for air pollution late on Saturday.
The city has a four-tier alert system, using blue, yellow, orange and red to indicate the air pollution level in order of increasing severity.
A red alert indicates the most serious air pollution, or Level 6 pollution, for three consecutive days. An orange alert indicates heavy to serious air pollution, or Level 5 to Level 6, alternately for three consecutive days.
The latest round of smog started on Friday, which marked both the traditional Chinese Lantern Festival and Valentine's Day. Holiday fireworks brought the air quality index (AQI) from more than 300 in the morning to 500 in the evening.
Residents questioned the lack of government action over the matter, believing authorities should have banned fireworks.
Wang Yuesi, a researcher with the Institute of Atmospheric Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said orange and red alerts required action by the public, such as cutting traffic, and government authorities were reluctant to issue the response as smog for three consecutive days is difficult to forecast accurately.
"Environmental authorities lacked preparation in responding to smog for both technical reasons and management reasons. All they hope is that continuous smoggy days like this never come," Wang said.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

China News: Beijing cuts car sales quota to curb air pollution (08 Nov 2013)


Beijing cuts car sales quota to curb air pollution
2013-11-08
Article type: Redistributed
Beijing will cut its new car sales quota by almost 40 percent next year in a bid to reduce vehicle emissions and curb severe air pollution, according to a new policy released on the Beijing government website on Tuesday.
Beijing will issue 150 thousand new license plates every year, from 2014 to 2017. That means there will be only 600 thousand new passenger vehicles in Beijing in the next four years, fewer than the city’s vehicle sales in 2010 alone, according to the Beijing government website.
Moreover, the new policy will increase annual sales quotas for new-energy vehicles from 20,000 in 2014 to 60,000 in 2017, accounting for 40 percent of the 2017 total license plate quota.
Beijing will perfect its differentiated parking charge policy in 2014, and officially bring it into force in 2015, the policy said.
The new policy has ruled out imposing a congestion charge in Beijing in 2014.

source from: http://english.mep.gov.cn/News_service/media_news/201311/t20131108_263094.htm

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Events: World Forum on Natural Capital organized by the Scottish Wildlife Trustin association with the United Nations Environment Programme and others started from 21 to 22 Nov 2013

World Forum on Natural Capital - Edinburgh 2013

World Forum on Natural Capital

Date: Thursday, 21 November 2013   -  Friday, 22 November 2013
Location: UK

About the Forum

A revolution is taking place in how businesses and governments account for natural capital.

The inaugural World Forum on Natural Capital will be the first major global conference devoted exclusively to turning the debate on natural capital accounting into action. It will build on the enormous private sector interest shown at the United Nations Earth Summit in Rio in June 2012 and the many developments that have taken place since.

Against a backdrop of growing global awareness that our ecosystems and biodiversity underpin both wealth creation and human security, the Rio Earth Summit saw the launch of the Natural Capital Declaration, a global finance-led initiative convened by the United Nations Environment Programme Finance Initiative and the Global Canopy Programme.

By signing the Declaration, CEOs at the helm of 39 banks, investment funds and insurance companies announced their commitment to understanding their impacts and dependencies on natural capital, and to incorporating natural capital considerations into their products and accounting. The United Nations Environment Programme is one of the key partners in the World Forum on Natural Capital, which will mark an important step in moving the debate further towards action.


WHY ATTEND?


There are many reasons to be in Edinburgh this November:

  • Understand the implications of the fast evolving debate about natural capital and how the opportunities and risks could affect your bottom line
  • Network with senior decision makers and sustainability leaders from around the world
  • Gain access to the latest developments and practical tools
  • See how natural capital relates to current developments in Integrated Reporting and new approaches to Corporate Social Responsibility
  • Help shape the debate for the benefit of business and the planet

WHAT IS NATURAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTING?

Fresh water, clean air, fertile soil, fish stocks and forests are all examples of the natural capital on which human wellbeing and economic prosperity depend. Yet these natural assets do not appear on traditional balance sheets and can therefore be invisible in decision-making. As a result, we are losing natural capital faster than ever before. A recent report by the TEEB for Business Coalition estimates the cost of environmental externalities at a staggering US$7.3 trillion annually. But we can't manage what we don't measure.

Natural capital accounting is a rapidly evolving new way of thinking about how we value the economic benefits we derive from our natural environment. (For an explanation of natural capital and ecosystem services click here.)

The World Forum on Natural Capital will bring together world-class speakers, cutting edge case studies and senior decision makers from different sectors, in order to turn the debate into practical action.
WBCSD quote

Lively plenaries and interactive breakout sessions in four conference streams will explore the 
risks and opportunities for business, allow access to the very latest developments and provide an opportunity to help shape the debate through dialogue between policymakers, business leaders and prominent experts in the field.

PARTNERS

The World Forum on Natural Capital is organised by the Scottish Wildlife Trustin association with the United Nations Environment Programme; International Union for Conservation of Nature; World Business Council for Sustainable Development; TEEB for Business Coalition and The Wildlife Trusts.
Information about the partner organisations can be found here. The project team is listed here.
For more information: http://www.naturalcapitalforum.com/