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Indigenous Brazilian group certified to trade carbon credits

[RIO DE JANEIRO] Brazil’s Paiter Suruí community has become the first indigenous group in the country to receive international certification to sell carbon credits in return for protecting and restoring forests in their Amazonian territory.The Suruí community, which numbers around 1300 people, was first contacted by outsiders in 1968. Over the past decade, with assistance [...]

Global Common Resources and the Just Distribution of Emission Shares: Some Alternative Views

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9760.2012.00416.x

Towards access for all? Policy and research on access of ethnic minority groups to natural areas in four European countries

Migration and growing ethnic diversity pose new questions for forest and nature policy and research, especially on the equality of access to natural areas. This paper compares national approaches in policy and research on ethnic minority groups’ access to natural areas in four Western-European countries: the United Kingdom (UK), The Netherlands, Germany and Denmark. It [...]

Insights from past millennia into climatic impacts on human health and survival

Climate change poses threats to human health, safety, and survival via weather extremes and climatic impacts on food yields, fresh water, infectious diseases, conflict, and displacement. Paradoxically, these risks to health are neither widely nor fully recognized. Historical experiences of diverse societies experiencing climatic changes, spanning multicentury to single-year duration, provide insights into population health [...]

Health impacts in US and Mexico of power-exporting plants in northern Mexico

In the past two decades, rapid population and economic growth on the U.S.–Mexico border has spurred a dramatic increase in electricity demand. In response, American energy multinationals have built power plants just south of the border that export most of their electricity to the U.S. This development has stirred considerable controversy because these plants effectively [...]

The Geological Record of Ocean Acidification: No Parallels for Today’s CO2 Emissions

Ocean acidification may have severe consequences for marine ecosystems; however, assessing its future impact is difficult because laboratory experiments and field observations are limited by their reduced ecologic complexity and sample period, respectively. In contrast, the geological record contains long-term evidence for a variety of global environmental perturbations, including ocean acidification plus their associated biotic [...]

Tropical Oceans Dried Out East Africa Around 2 Million Years Ago

What happens in the sea doesn’t always stay in the sea. Large differences in the temperature of the Indian and Pacific oceans 2 million years ago shifted rainfall patterns and dried out East Africa, replacing woodland with grassland and leading to an explosion in the number of species that grazed the region, according to results [...]