Let me know if you would like to be on or off the ping list
These people are being led by evil. Period.
CW II.....
Not surprised!
What land?
ping, this was in breaking but got moved out......
AAre they going to size farm land to make us more dependent on other countries?
ZERO Chavez that’s his name!
La Fortaleza and San Juan National Historic Site in Puerto Rico
Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site
Carlsbad Caverns National Park
Chaco Culture
Everglades National Park
Grand Canyon National Park
Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
Independence Hall
Kluane / Wrangell-St Elias / Glacier Bay / Tatshenshini-Alsek
Mammoth Cave National Park
Mesa Verde National Park
Monticello and the University of Virginia in Charlottesville
Olympic National Park
Papahānaumokuākea
Pueblo de Taos
Redwood National and State Parks
Statue of Liberty
Waterton Glacier International Peace Park * Yellowstone National Park
Yosemite National Park
http://whc.unesco.org/en/list
UNEP Sasakawa Prize open: US $200,000 for innovative green project
Nairobi, 29 July 2010 - The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and The Nippon Foundation today officially launched the 2011 UNEP Sasakawa Prize to find the most innovative environmental project in the developing world - with a cash prize of US$ 200,000 awaiting the winner.
The UNEP Sasakawa Prize is awarded every year to a grassroots organisation judged to have made an outstanding contribution to the protection and management of the environment, and to social development. The theme for this year’s prize is “Forests for People, Forests for Green Growth” in support of the United Nations International Year of Forests in 2011.
Of particular interest to this year’s jury will be projects that:
Promote the conservation and sustainable management of forests
Contribute to a meaningful reduction in carbon emissions caused by deforestation or forest degradation
Maintain forest ecosystems to improve resilience to climate change
Support development among forest-dependent communities
Conserve biodiversity and help protect ecosystems in forests
The UNEP Sasakawa Prize is designed to nurture innovation and research in green solutions to environmental challenges by offering financial support to the winner. The jury is especially interested in sustainable projects that can be scaled up or replicated elsewhere, thus helping to inspire others to take a greater interest in protecting our environment and to increase its scope of beneficiary, especially in the under-served rural communities.
By helping these entrepreneurs scale-up their activities, the prize is able to boost local economies and help tackle poverty and marginalization, while promoting the sustainable use of resources and ecosystems.
The winner of the 2011 UNEP Sasakawa Prize will receive the prestigious award at a special ceremony to be held at the meeting of the UNEP Governing Council from 21 - 25 February 2011 in Nairobi, Kenya.
First awarded in 1984, the UNEP Sasakawa Prize has helped nurture a wide range of grassroots environmental initiatives across the world, spurring fledgling projects onto great success.
One of the recipients of last year’s Prize was Nuru Design; a project that brings innovative lighting solutions to rural communities in Rwanda, Kenya and India. By replacing kerosene and firewood lamps with solar-powered lights, Nuru Design not only helps reduce the high levels of CO2 produced by traditional lamps, but also tackled the health and literacy problems caused by a lack of access to affordable lighting. Thanks to Nuru Design’s efforts, over 3,000 households in Rwanda are switching from kerosene to Nuru lights every month.
It is this kind of innovative, inspirational project that the UNEP Sasakawa judges hope to reward in 2011.
Nominations will be accepted until 30 September 2010 via the UNEP Sasakawa Prize website: www.unep.org/sasakawa
For more information, please contact: Lucita Jasmin, Head of Special Events, UNEP Division of Communication and Public Information, Email: lucita.jasmin@unep.org
Wangari Maathai, UNEP Sasakawa Prize jury member presents the 2009-10 UNEP Sasakawa Prize trophy to Stuart Conway, co-founder of Trees, Water and People
Further Resources
UNEP: Sasakawa Prize
Follow Us
Keep up to date with UNEP events on Facebook, Twitter and You Tube.
UNEP on Facebook
We know what happens to public land under state control. They end up being owned by the family trusts of partners of the largest law firms and the rat/repugnican thieves in the legislature like many US Senators from the western states .
How does a lawyer/legislator go from paying his student loans to being a US Senator worth nearly 200 million? Great stewardship of public resources of course.
I’m bflr for now, and thanks for the ping LucyT. When I come back in a few hours, I want read the whole article, but for now wondering why the Fed has ANY jurisdiction WITHIN a State without permission of the State.
The Fed does not in essence own the State. The State in essence owns the Fed. The Fed was created as....say a management company for the Union of the States, and operates at the will of the States. So what’s going on here? Looks to me as though the Fed is standing on a very thin, fragile platform comprised of precedent...only because they got away with it before.
It’s time to kick some Fed butt out of the business of the States me thinks.
“Stroke of the pen; Law of the land......cool.” (William Jefferson Clinton.)