The landmark Paris Agreement adopted at COP21 was made possible, in part, by the business community. Governments around the world needed to know, and be able to show, that business supported an ambitious approach to tackle climate change.
Markets & Enterprise
Especialistas de WRI Yamide Dagnet, Eliza Northrop, Heather McGray, Athena Ballesteros, Joe Thwaites et Niranjali Amerasinghe contribué à ce poste.
O dia de hoje marca um ponto histórico decisivo na ação global com relação à mudança climática. Durante a Conferência do Clima das Nações Unidas em Paris, 196 países se uniram no Acordo...
Experts de WRI Yamide Dagnet, Eliza Northrop, Heather McGray, Athena Ballesteros, Joe Thwaites et Niranjali Amerasinghe contribué à ce poste.
Aujourd’hui, nous sommes arrivés à un tournant dans l’histoire de l’action internationale sur le changement climatique. À la conférence de l’ONU à Paris, 196 pays se sont ralliés à l’Accord de...
The Paris Agreement is an historic turning point in global action on climate change. This universal pact sets the world on a course to a zero-carbon, resilient, prosperous and fair future. While the Agreement is not enough by itself to solve the problem. it places us clearly on the path to a truly global solution.
At a UN Summit in September, the largest-ever gathering of world leaders adopted the Sustainable Development Goals, a bold new roadmap to tackle climate change and extreme poverty by 2030. The global community now faces the real work of translating vision into action. Fortunately, early actions by some countries already align with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and help point the way forward.
While dealing with sooty clouds from massive forest fires in recent weeks, Indonesia submitted its post-2020 climate action plan, committing to an unconditional target of a 29 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, compared to a business-as-usual scenario.
Using Aqueduct data, participants in a recent workshop in Trifinio, Guatemala developed scenarios for decision-makers to manage water and adapt to climate change.
America’s smartest business leaders are pursuing a strategy unheard of a few short years ago: they are building economic growth while tackling climate change at its source.
Global Forest Watch Commodities
Global Forest Watch Commodities (GFW-Commodities) is a business tool to end deforestation in commodity supply chains.
Global Forest Watch Commodities
Global Forest Watch Commodities is a business tool to end deforestation in commodity supply chains.