Remove about republishing-guidelines
article thumbnail

Minnow, walleye and perch are at risk after Imperial Oil wastewater leaks in Alberta

Corporate Knights

Despite this, environmental guidelines for “safe” naphthenic acid concentrations do not exist. The lack of transparency and delayed responses surrounding these current spills raises questions about how many undocumented incidents could be taking place every year. Read the original article.

article thumbnail

The JUST Report: Is War Reshaping How We Think About ESG?

Just Capital

For a feature this week, its CEO, Cyrus Taraporevala, and proxy voting guidelines lead, Benjamin Colton , sat down with JUST editorial director Rich Feloni for an in-depth discussion on everything from the coming proxy season, corporate “brown-spinning” and the war in Ukraine. It’s also hugely influential on ESG. Be well, Martin. JUST Events.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Using Technology to Empower Indian Mothers

Sense and Sustainability

It has been republished here with the author’s permission. The technology was developed based on World Health Organization guidelines. In an article about the app The Better India notes “Women belonging to underprivileged communities, be it in the slums or the rural areas, often miss regular check-ups at the health camps.

article thumbnail

The vapes we throw out could be powering thousands of EVs

Corporate Knights

Over a year, this amounts to 150 million devices—which together contain enough lithium for about 6,000 Teslas.” Regulatory oversight has so far proved insufficient to ensure disposal guidelines are being followed and that manufacturers are complying with collection requirements. This article is republished from The Energy Mix.

Waste 267
article thumbnail

Congress passes $1T infrastructure bill – but how does the government go about spending that much money?

Renewable Energy World

The bill puts about US$240 billion toward building or rebuilding roads, bridges, public transit, airports and railways. So how does the government go about spending all that money? This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Ana Maria Dimand , Boise State University.