Similar Posts
Microplastic Series Shines a Light on the Consequences of Single-Use Plastics –
Sweet Sneak Studio is a branding and communication agency for food, lifestyle and gastronomy. In the Microplastic Photos Series, they portray eight different foods that are prone to containing microplastics.
WEBINAR: The Sustainability Revolution : Where sustainability and profitability both thrive | Chartered Institution of Civil Engineering Surveyors
WEBINAR: The Sustainability Revolution : Where sustainability and profitability both thrive – ‘R’ evolution by John Fraser of Hexagon. Join John Fraser, President of UK, Ireland and Benelux from Hexagon, as he talks about the Fourth Industrial Revolution, fuelled by digitalisation and connectivity, both of which are essential to empower the sustainability revolution. Please book on-line and a Teams link will be sent prior to the webinar. All welcome.
Air pollution: E-commerce’s sustainability problem that isn’t the cardboard box
Aileen Nowlan, Senior Manager, EDF+Business This post originally appeared on EDF+Business. With the click of a button, our groceries, clothes, personal care products, household items – just about anything – could arrive on our doorsteps in a neatly packaged cardboard box.
WRI: Investors Face Significant Sustainability Data Hurdles
As more investors pursue strategies that consider relevant environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors, they look to data to inform the investment process. A new World Resources Institute analysis found that investors still face significant sustainability data challenges.
Tasmania Builds Road From Single-Use Plastics, Glass And Printer Toner (Why not just reuse the toner cartridges?)
By Lorraine Chow via Eco Watch A local government in Tasmania found a clever way to recycle single-use plastics and other landfill-bound waste by building a new road.The ……
Is Sustainability the New Black? | Sustainable Sourcing
Carbon labels and digital passport for clothing, accessories and shoes may quickly become fashions hottest new trend. Telling end users how to wash or take care of their wares is no longer enough to appease today’s green-led consumers. Weary of greenwashing (only 20 Percent of consumers actually trust brand sustainability claims), consumers are looking for hard facts before giving up their dollars. I’ve spoken before about the heavy impacts of fast fashion and how the revolving of trends with every season has snowballed into widespread pollution, a waste crisis, and the exploitation of workers. And yet, there are few signs of change.