KAKO MOŽETE POMOĆI

ECO HVAR:

 

UDRUGA ZA DOBROBIT LJUDI, ŽIVOTINJA I OKOLIŠA OTOKA HVARA

Adresa: Pitve 93, 21465 Jelsa, Hrvatska / Croatia

OIB: 14009858487

Matični broj: 04089316

RNO broj: 0254098.

Možete pogledati detalje registracije ovdje

 

Izvori financiranja:

 

- Međunarodni fondovi i zaklade

- Prilozi dobrotvornih udruga sa sličnim ciljevima

- Dotacije iz državnog proračuna, proračuna grada, općine i županije i njihovih fondova

- Dobrovoljni prilozi i darovi

- Prilozi članova i pobornika

 

Žiro račun za donacije:

 

Privredna Banka Zagreb d.d.

Polsovnica 220 Pjaca

Pjaca 1

21465 Jelsa

Hrvatska

 

IBAN: HR37 2340 0091 1106 0678 6 (Account number)

SWIFT CODE: PBZGHR2X

Naziv računa: ECO HVAR

(Adresa: ECO HVAR, Pitve 93, 21465 Jelsa, Hrvatska)

 

Donacije mogu biti u kunama ili devizama, npr eurima, funtama ili dolarima. Svaka donacija je nam dragocjena, i primitak će biti potvrđen.

 

Nalazite se ovdje: Home info KAKO MOŽETE POMOĆI

Eco Environment News feeds

  • British arm of Heartland, which has taken oil and Republican funding, to be led by ex-Ukip head Lois Perry

    Climate science deniers are lining up a political offensive in Britain after a US lobby group opened a UK branch which is already working with Nigel Farage.

    The Reform UK leader was the guest of honour at the launch of Heartland UK/Europe, which is to be headed by a former leader of Ukip and climate denier.

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  • Exclusive: Sampling results show ‘extremely concerning’ concentrations of PFOS and PFOA at sites across UK

    RAF bases are hotspots of toxic “forever chemical” pollution in water, analysis of Ministry of Defence documents has revealed.

    Moreover, some of the highest concentrations of these chemicals in British drinking water sources are near RAF bases, official sampling results obtained by the Guardian and Watershed Investigations show.

    Continue reading...

  • Experts believe H5N1 bird flu belongs in a growing category of infectious diseases that can cause pandemics across many species. But there are ways to reduce the risks

    Bird flu poses a threat that is “unique and new in our lifetime” because it has become a “‘panzootic” that can kill huge numbers across multiple species, experts warn. For months, highly pathogenic bird flu, or H5N1, has been circulating in dairy farms, with dozens of human infections reported among farm workers. It has now jumped into more than 48 species of mammals, from bears to dairy cows, causing mass die-offs in sea lions and elephant seal pups. Last week, the first person in the US died of the infection.

    This ability to infect, spread between, and kill such a wide range of creatures has prompted some scientists to call H5N1 a “panzootic”: an epidemic that leaps species barriers and can devastate diverse animal populations, posing a threat to humans too. As shrinking habitats, biodiversity loss and intensified farming create perfect incubators for infectious diseases to jump from one species to another, some scientists say panzootics could become one of the era’s defining threats to human health and security.

    Continue reading...

  • UK firm in vanguard of companies arguing SMRs are quicker and cheaper option than large Hinkley-sized nuclear plants

    The Hinkley Point C power plant in Somerset is gargantuan. The 176-hectare (435-acre) plant will provide 3.2 gigawatts of power, enough for 6m homes. It is not just the project that is huge: the cost is as well. With a price tag that has ballooned to a reported £48bn, and delayed by at least five years, it has become a symbol of the pitfalls of nuclear power.

    But a clutch of companies argue they have a quicker, cheaper option than large Hinkley-sized plants in the form of small modular reactors (SMRs), which can be built in a factory and then slotted together on site.

    Continue reading...

  • Campaigners say pollution levels in street in Herne Hill were far higher when private schools were open

    Parents driving children to private schools is associated with a 27% increase in air pollution and congestion in a south London street, according to campaigners who are calling for private schools to make greater use of sustainable transport.

    The analysis by Solve the School Run found that nitrogen dioxide levels and fine particulates produced by vehicles in the street in Herne Hill were far higher when nearby private schools such as Dulwich college were open, compared with when only local state schools were open.

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  • Alex Margo Arden says ‘symbolic damage’ helped force public conversation about climate crisis

    Protesters who targeted paintings to raise awareness of the climate crisis were using an “effective” tactic also used by the Suffragettes, according to an artist whose new show focuses on recent attacks on high-profile artworks.

    Alex Margo Arden, whose exhibition, Safety Curtain, opens this week at Auto Italia in east London, said the “symbolic damage” caused to the images, which were protected by glass, helped force a public conversation about the climate crisis.

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  • An Environment Agency report has identified more than 10,000 ‘high-risk sites’ contaminated with PFAS

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  • Women with little formal education trained to become solar technicians, transforming villages and tackling patriarchal norms

    In a dimly lit corridor of a mud-walled house nestled among coconut trees, Sharifa Hussein stripped red and black cables, a screwdriver voltage tester balanced between her lips and rolls of cable lying by her feet.

    Then, with the help of three other women, she attached the two wires to an electronic device nailed on the wall.

    Continue reading...

  • A Guardian and Quinto Elemento Lab investigation finds very high levels of lead and arsenic in homes near a factory processing US toxic waste

    Raquel Villarreal lives in a bright-yellow house in Mexico’s Monterrey metropolitan area with her family and nine cats. Here, the emergency medicine doctor has raised three daughters, one of whom died at the age of 14.

    Just steps away is an industrial plant that operates 24 hours a day, emitting pollution that neighbors say blankets the neighborhood and which Villarreal says is hard to remove from her car.

    Continue reading...

  • Ontario’s Marineland lost five belugas last year, which the park’s management puts down to the ‘circle of life’. But activists claim animal welfare is at stake

    On the southern shores of the Niagara River, a few hundred feet from the thundering falls, sits Marineland of Canada – an amusement park, zoo, aquarium and forest occupying nearly 1,000 acres of land (400 hectares). Over the years, millions of people have clamoured to view the park’s 4,000 animals, including its prized walruses, orcas, dolphins and belugas.

    But over the past few years, the park has taken a decidedly dark turn as there has been a string of deaths among the world’s largest captive beluga population. Last year, five belugas died at the facility bringing the total number of whales and dolphins to die there since 2019 to more than 20.

    Continue reading...

Novosti: Cybermed.hr

Novosti: Biologija.com

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