A new film by Evan Abramson and Carmen Elsa Lopez looks at the world's first carbon financed water scheme. Vestergaard Frandsen, a company that makes products to prevent disease in the developing world, shows how providing safe drinking water while cutting more than 2 million tons of carbon emissions a year is good business.
Related Articles
The State of Our Oceans: We are Headed Towards a Marine Mass Extinction
GE is Helping Nestle to Save Millions of Gallons of Water
The Ocean Conservancy's International Coastal Cleanup Day
New Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement
World Oceans Day 2012
World Oceans Day in America (2012)
Urgent Appeal to Save our Oceans
Marshall Islands World Ocean Day 2012
State of the Climate Global Analysis Nov 2011
Seven Ways to Save the Seas
Air and Water in the OECD Report
OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050: The Consequences of Inaction
Water as a Weapon of WarNew Tool Helps Companies with Water Risks
Protect the US Clean Water Act
Report on the UN's World Water Day Panel Discussion
World Oceans Day UN Panel Discussion
Alarming Facts About Water
Solutions to Diminishing Ground Water
Population Growth and Climate Change will Add to the World Water Crisis
Water Management Webcast: Cities and the Global Water Crisis
Siemens Water Tool on Facebook
Water School’s Ascent of Mount Kilimanjaro
Banana Peels and Water Purification
Sustainable Water Purification Technology Investing in Water
Celebrate World Water Day
UN World Water Day 2012
World Water Week 2011
World Water Week 2011: The Business of Water Management Requires Collaboration
World Oceans Day 2011 is Focused on Youth
WWF Celebrates Canada Water Week
GWC and World Water Day 2011
First International Water Hour
Blog Action Day 2010: Raising Awareness about Water
Home
Business
businesses
carbon
CO2
commerce
Corporate
corporation
Profit
reduction
viability
viable
The World's First Carbon for Water Program
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
Great project.We highly appreciate this huge social work.This will help save hundreds of innocent lives as well thousands of trees...Keep the good work up!!!!!
ReplyDelete