While much of the focus on restoring the Chesapeake Bay is on nutrient and sediment pollution, there’s another type of pollution that’s not often discussed: Toxic contaminants.
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While much of the focus on restoring the Chesapeake Bay is on nutrient and sediment pollution, there’s another type of pollution that’s not often discussed: Toxic contaminants.
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"A report by the UN Environment Programme's Finance Initiative (UNEP FI) says loss of soils, forests, and fisheries, as well as rising resource costs, are likely to become increasingly important to a nation's economic health – and may therefore affect its ability to repay or refinance sovereign debt."
This excellent report makes the link between the world's financial debt crisis and the global ecological debt crisis. The debate on austerity gets a completely different dimension if you look at this double challenge. Via Willy De Backer Delete the scoop?
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