Izborna skupština 2022.

Objavljeno u O Udruzi

ZAPISNIK sa izborne skupštine udruge „ECO HVAR“ udruge za dobrobit ljudi, životinja i okoliša otoka Hvara, održane dana 23. ožujka 2022. godine u 17:00 sati u prostoriji 'Kušaona 409 u Jelsi.

Prisutni: Dinka Barbić, Branko Bunčuga, Debora Bunčuga, Marija Bunčuga, Frank John Duboković, Vivian Grisogono, Dragutin Vojnović, Mauricette Vojnović.

Odsutni članovi koji su ispričali svoj nedolazak: Carol Adeney, Amanda Blanch, Ingrid Bujis, Katia Dawnay, Žarko de Grisogono, Klara Papugova, Sara Radonić, Jasenka Splivalo, Frank Verhart.

Započeto u 17:30 sati.

Skupštinu je otvorila predsjednica Vivian Grisogono i predložila sljedeći

DNEVNI RED

  1. Otvaranje Sjednice, utvrđivanje broja prisutnih članova, biranje zapisničara

  2. Glasanje;

Kandidat za Predsjednicu: Vivian Grisogono

Kandidat za tajnicu Udruge: Debora Bunčuga

Kandidati za nadzorni odbor: Marija Bunčuga, Dinka Barbić i Sara Radonić

  1. Razno

Ad 1) Predsjednica je utvrdila da skupštini prisustvuje dovoljan broj članova i da ima dovoljan broj glasova za donošenje valjanih odluka.

Za zapisničara je izabrana gđa Marija Bunčuga.

Ad 2) Izbor organa Udruge. Četvorogodišnji mandat dosadašnjeg rukovodstva Udruge završava. S obzirom da je gđa Nada Kozulić najavila da se neće više kandidirati, predložene su za nove članove nadzornog odbora Vivian Grisogono, Debora Bunčuga, Marija Bunčuga, Dinka Barbić i Sara Radonić koja zamjeni Nadu Kozulić kao članice odbora i zastupnice Udruge. Za predsjednicu je predložena Vivian Grisogono i za tajnicu Debora Bunčuga.

Skupština donosi jednoglasno sljedeću:

ODLUKU

i) za Predsjednicu Udruge ponovno se izabire Vivian Grisogono.

ii) za tajnicu Udruge izabire se Debora Bunčuga.

iii) u nadzorni odbor izabiru se Marija Bunčuga, Dinka Barbić i Sara Radonić, a u odbor. ulaze i sukladno Statutu Predsjednica Udruge Vivian Grisogono i Tajnica Debora Bunčuga.

iv) Sve osobe navedene u točki iii) ove odluke ovlašćuju se za zastupanje Udruge i potpisivanje financijskih dokumenata Udruge.

Ad 3. Razno. Diskusija o projektima Udruge.

Sastanak je službeno završio u 18:30

Marija Bunčuga                                        Vivian Grisogono MA(Oxon)                                Dinka Barbić

Zapisničar                                                 Predsjednica                                                Članica Odbora, Zastupnica

Nalazite se ovdje: Home O Udruzi Izborna skupština 2022.

Eco Environment News feeds

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    The UK should stop burning wood to generate power because it is not needed to meet the government’s target of decarbonising the electricity sector by 2030, according to analysis.

    Ed Miliband, the energy security and net zero secretary, is expected to make a decision soon on whether to allow billions of pounds in new public subsidies for biomass burning, despite fierce opposition from green groups.

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  • Juan Guillermo Garcés had a brush with death while burning jungle for cattle pasture – now he runs a nature reserve in Colombia where more than 100 new species have been discovered

    • Words and photographs by Anastasia Austin and Douwe den Held

    Juan Guillermo Garcés remembers coming face to face with death at age 17. Smoke filled the air, choking his lungs. The temperature rose and Garcés struggled to see through the haze. Panic set in as he watched monkeys, snakes, lizards and birds desperately trying to escape the flames surrounding them.

    Garcés and his brother started the fire that nearly killed them to clear a large stretch of land. But when the wind suddenly changed direction, they found themselves locked in. The brothers survived, but the fire destroyed the little remaining patch of virgin forest on the family’s 2,500-hectare (6,200-acre) ranch, nestled along Colombia’s Magdalena River. Experiencing firsthand what the animals and plants endured was a turning point for Garcés.

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    The world’s addiction to fossil fuels is a “Frankenstein’s monster sparing nothing and no one”, the UN secretary general, António Guterres, told leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davoson Wednesday.

    “Our fossil fuel addiction is a Frankenstein’s monster, sparing nothing and no one. All around us, we see clear signs that the monster has become master,”Guterres said in a speech days after 2024 was revealed to be the hottest year on record and Donald Trump began his second term as US president by pulling the country out of the Paris climate agreement and pledging to “drill, baby, drill” for more oil and gas. The fossil fuel industry gave $75m to Trump’s campaign.

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  • Charities in England that bid for share of millions say idea that Treasury could keep money is ‘heartbreaking’

    Charities that bid for a share of millions of pounds of water company fines to restore rivers in England polluted by sewage say the UK government will be guilty of an appalling breach of trust if the cash is diverted to Treasury coffers.

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  • Climate negotiator André Aranha Corrêa do Lago given top job, bypassing Brazilian environment minister Marina Silva

    Brazil has announced the top team for the next UN climate summit, which will be hosted in Belém this November, bypassing the country’s environment minister, Marina Silva, in favour of a veteran diplomat for the crucial role of president of the talks.

    The experienced climate negotiator and secretary for climate, energy and environment, André Aranha Corrêa do Lago, will preside over the Cop30 summit, which is expected to draw scores of world leaders to Brazil – though not Donald Trump, who soon after his inauguration on Monday ordered the US’s withdrawal from the Paris climate agreement.

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  • Pollution aside, the problem with expanding Heathrow lies in the disruption and delay inevitable in such a complex project

    Get ready for another season of that interminable saga, Heathrow’s third runway. There was a lull during the Covid pandemic when the airport’s owners, despite winning permission from the supreme court in 2020 to submit a planning application, cooled their jets while they waited for passenger numbers to recover. Now the whole thing is back, courtesy of Rachel Reeves. The chancellor is reported to be preparing to use a speech next week to declare support for a third runway at Heathrow alongside wider airport expansion in the south-east.

    The best form of airport expansion is none at all, environmentalists (some of them in the cabinet) will argue, but it looks as if Reeves has dismissed those objections in the name of economic growth. A £1.1bn investment in Stansted, to enable it to grow its annual capacity from 29 million passengers to 43 million, was welcomed by the government last year.

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  • Acronyms, in-jokes and online fan clubs spring up as viewers across the globe prepare for Sydney’s first corpse bloom in 15 years – from a safe distance

    In a Sydney greenhouse, a tall pointed flower is about to bloom for the first time in years.

    To the scientific community, the Botanic Gardens of Sydney’s corpse flower is known as amorphophallus titanum, which translates to large, deformed penis. But online, the rare endangered plant has taken on a new name: Putricia.

    Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email

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  • First Quantum Minerals’ copper operation was shut down more than a year ago, but Indigenous people report restrictions on movement and unexplained illness and death

    For the people of the nine Indigenous communities within the perimeter of the sprawling Cobre Panamácopper mine, travelling into and out of the concession is far from straightforward. An imposing metal gateway staffed by the mining company’s security guards blocks the road. People say the company severely restricts their movement in and out of the zone, letting them through only on certain days.

    The mining concession, located 120km (75 miles) west of Panama City, is owned by Canada-based First Quantum Minerals, which operates through its local subsidiary, Minera Panamá. The company’s private security guards, not the national police, patrol the concession. Local residents, mostly subsistence farmers of modest means, say that First Quantum operates as a state within a state.

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  • Artisanal shellfish farmers face ruinous losses but money meant to help is going to the powerful fishing industry, say critics

    Early on a warm September morning in southern Italy, Giovanni Nicandro sets out from the port of Taranto in his small boat. Summoning his courage, the mussel farmer inspects his year’s work – only to find them all dead, a sight that almost brings him to tears.

    “We have many problems,” he says. “The problems start as soon as we open our eyes in the morning.” The loss is total – not only for Nicandro but also for Taranto’s 400 other mussel farmers, after a combination of pollution and rising sea temperatures devastated their harvest.

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  • Altadena’s Village Playgarden education center served diverse families with outdoor classrooms, small farm and animals – till it was destroyed by flames

    In Altadena, it had become the hot ticket among the preschool set.

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Novosti: Cybermed.hr

Novosti: Biologija.com

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