Post by bhushraislam145 on Mar 9, 2024 5:14:28 GMT
Caring for the environment has gained relevance among the world's main potentials due to climate change and its repercussions if we do not act with policies that promote the care of natural resources. Although pollution is a global problem, the most affected are developing countries, considered Paula Caballero, Senior Director of Environment and Natural Resources at the Global Practice Institute, which is in charge of evaluating business and public policy practices to preserve environment. Despite this, pollution is a problem that has a solution, Caballero indicated. “Many policies, tools and technologies are already available to address the issue. “Countries like Mexico, Chile and Thailand have taken great steps to improve the air quality of their capitals while continuing to grow physically and economically,” he added.
Switzerland, Luxembourg, Australia, Singapore and the Czech Republic are the countries that most promote measures to care for the environment, according to the Environmental Performance Index, prepared by the institute. The index measures (on a scale of 0 to 100) the degree to which countries implement policies to protect their natural environments, by calculating 20 independent indicators across areas such as air quality, agriculture, climate and energy. Switzerland is the first place, because it has good air quality, water resources, as well as preservation Europe Cell Phone Number List of natural areas. Luxembourg has the number two position, as it has high levels of air quality, water, Agriculture and Biodiversity. Australia, Singapore and the Czech Republic have positions three, four and five, because these nations have policies that promote the care of water resources, water, and agriculture.The serious and harmful effects of climate change, and tourism as an ally and important element in the conservation of migratory species, were highlighted today by experts in Panama at the beginning of a workshop on the subject sponsored by the United Nations.
Uruguayan Francisco Rilla, training program officer for the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS), which organizes the workshop for countries not party to the convention, told reporters that the secondary effect of climate change "is one of the most serious for the conservation of migratory species. Rilla gave as an example the changes in reproductive behavior in sea turtles, and explained that warming in the areas where they reproduce affected the sex of the new chelonians. "That is to say, heat changes the sexual determination of an individual that is going to be born, so there will be an increase in males or an increase in females, according to the temperature, and that will obviously unbalance the population," said Rilla. . He added that this imbalance caused by climate change will cause problems for the ecosystem because, he highlighted, "if there are going to be more males and fewer females then there will be no possibility of reproduction." The expert highlighted that the impact of climate change is also directly affecting the migratory movement of species.