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WORLD ENVIRONMENT DAY
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5 June 2007
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yourself!
This year's global World Environment Day celebrations take place in Norway --
in Oslo and Tromsø. Highlights of the celebrations in Tromsø include an Ecumenical
Service led by Archbishop Desmond Tutu in the Arctic Cathedral with representatives
of various faiths; the award ceremony for the International Children's Painting
Competition; and a televised debate on the topic of melting ice and climate change.
On 5 June the celebrations will move to Oslo with the award ceremony for the
Sophie Prize, which will be given on this occasion to Former Prime Minister of
Sweden Goran Persson. In the afternoon an art exhibit on climate change organized
by UNEP and the Natural World Museum will take place at the Nobel Peace Centre.
http://www.wed.npolar.no/world-environment-day-2007/
world environment day
climate change
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24
OUR PLANET MAGAZINE
CLIMATE CHANGE AND THE CRYOSPHERE
World Environment Day (WED) was established by the United Nations General
Assembly in 972 to mark the opening of the Stockholm Conference on the Human
Environment. Another resolution, adopted by the General Assembly the same
day, led to the creation of UNEP. Commemorated each year on 5 June, WED is one
of the principal vehicles through which the United Nations stimulates worldwide
awareness of the environment and enhances political attention and action. The
World Environment Day slogan selected for 2007 is `Melting Ice: a Hot Topic?' In
support of International Polar Year, the WED theme selected for 2007 focuses on
the effects that climate change is having on polar ecosystems and communities,
and the ensuing consequences around the world.
http://www.unep.org/wed/2007/english/
After helping more than 00,000 people in 8,000 Indian households finance
clean energy from their PV solar electric home systems, UNEP's Indian Solar Loan
Programme, represented by project manager Jyoti Prasad Painuly, won an
Energy Globe award. The Energy Globe is bestowed annually on projects from
around the world "which make careful and economical use of resources and
employ alternative energy sources". The four-year Indian Solar Loan Programme,
launched in 2003 with support from the UN Foundation and the Shell Foundation,
is a partnership between UNEP, the UNEP Risoe Centre on Energy, Climate and
Sustainable Development, and two of India's largest banking groups to establish a
consumer credit market for financing solar home systems (SHS) in Southern India,
where the conventional electricity grid is absent or unreliable. From a small, cash-
only business in 2003, the solar home sector market now sees more than 50% of
sales financed by banks, with 20 banks with networks of more than 2,000 branches
now offering solar home financing. UNEP has used the success of the Indian
Solar Loan Programme to expand into other areas, including solar water heating
loan programmes in Morocco and Tunisia and others in development for Algeria,
Indonesia, Mexico and Chile. http://www.uneptie.org/energy/act/fin/india/
The Goldman Environmental Prize is the world's largest prize honoring
grassroots environmentalists, annually awarding US $25,000 to recipients
from each of the world's six inhabited continental regions.
The 2007 Goldman Environmental Prize winners, announced on 22 April, are:
North America: Sophia Rabliauskas, 47, Manitoba, Canada, for securing interim
protection for the boreal forest of Manitoba.
Africa: Hammerskjoeld Simwinga, 45, Zambia, for creating an innovative
community development programme that restored wildlife populations.
Asia: Tsetsegee Munkhbayar, 40, Mongolia: Munkhbayar, for working with
government and grassroots organizations to shut down destructive mining
operations along Mongolia's scarce waterways.
South & Central America: Julio Cusurichi, 36, Peru, for securing a national reserve
in the remote Peruvian Amazon to protect sensitive rain forest ecosystems and
the rights of indigenous peoples.
Europe: Willie Corduff, 53, Ireland, for halting construction of an illegally-
approved pipeline through their land.
Islands & Island Nations: Orri Vigfússon, 64, Iceland, for brokering
international fishing rights buyouts with governments and corporations in
the North Atlantic to stop destructive commercial salmon fishing.
http://www.goldmanprize.org/
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March 2007 saw the start of International Polar Year 2007­2008, a worldwide
effort to increase understanding of how the Earth's remote polar regions affect global
climate systems. Organized through the International Council for Science (ICSU) and
the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), IPY 2007-8 will involve more than 200
projects, with thousands of scientists from over 60 nations examining a wide range
of physical, biological and social research topics. As part of IPY, UNEP is supporting
the ambitious Arctic Drift project in which the polar schooner Tara will drift for two
years trapped in the Arctic ice, providing an unprecedented platform for scientific
observations and research on how the Arctic environment is changing, and relaying
its findings to scientists, policy makers and the general public. Tara's progress can be
followed on the expeditions pages of the UNEP website www.unep.org.
With an estimated 35 million volunteers
from more than 00 countries, the
Clean Up the World campaign is
UNEP's major partner is promoting
global awareness and action on the
environment. Each year the campaign,
which peaks in September during Clean
Up the World weekend, is linked to
the theme of World Environment Day,
providing its members with factsheets
on the issues and website links to UNEP.
Clean Up the World members particpate
in World Environment Day activities on
all continenets and, this year, are being
encouraged to contribute to the
Billion Tree Campaign
www.unep.org/billiontreecampaign.
international polar year
energy globe awards