International Conservation & Development

Fellow Story

The Laundering Machine: How Fraud and Corruption in Peru’s Concession System are Destroying the Future of its Forests

This past week in Lima, EIA launched a new report entitled “The Laundering Machine: How Fraud and Corruption in Peru’s Concession System are Destroying the Future of its Forests”. The full report is available in both English and Spanish as PDFs posted on EIA’s homepage. In addition, we have created a digital version that contains links to many pertinent official documents, news stories, videos and other supplementary information.
May 1, 2012
Fellow Story

Meyerson's research in Czech Republic focus of embassy video

Laura Meyerson of the University of Rhode Island works at the Institute of Botany in Pruhonice on exploring genetic qualities of a very common plant phragmatis australis.This global research project can help to develop better understanding of the invasive species. Watch the video
April 27, 2012
Fellow Story

Sievers's company brings Hungarian ethanol plant online

Pannonia Ethanol, a corn-ethanol plant in Dunafoldvar, Hungary, is now producing ethanol. Pannonia Ethanol Zrt., a special purpose subsidiary of Ethanol Europe, hired Fagen Europe LLC as the project’s design builder for the facility, which will produce up to 240 MMly (63.4 MMgy) of ethanol in central Hungary, said Eric Sievers, CEO of Ethanol Europe. Read the full story
April 26, 2012
Fellow Story

Johnson quoted about EIA's new report about American role in illegal logging in Peru

The United States and Puerto Rico account for 80% of the total value of Peruvian timber sales, said Andrea Johnson, forest campaign director of the Environmental Investigation Agency. Read the full story
April 24, 2012
Fellow Story

Dlott on the true meaning of "more with less, save the rest" for agriculture

“More with less, save the rest.” The three key concepts set forth in this phrase have been at the center of many recent domestic and international conversations about the future of agriculture. The discussion regarding the first concept follows the logic that food production will need to double by 2050 to meet demand. This will be due to an overall increase in the global population coupled with increases in the consumption of animal protein, fruits, and vegetables as the standard of living, especially in developing countries, steadily rises.
April 24, 2012
Fellow Story

Sims Gallagher interviewed about international obstacles to renewables by German think tank

New investments in China and the Middle East have demonstrated a developing strategic interest in renewable energies. Yet every country still faces obstacles: be it legislation in the United States or enforcement and rapid development in China. Kelly Sims Gallagher of the Fletcher School at Tufts University sits down with IP to talk about the future of energy policy and its effects on foreign relations. Read the full interview
April 9, 2012
Fellow Story

Lowenstein says Titanic today might dodge better but would encounter more icebergs

The Titanic hit an iceberg off the coast of Newfoundland, but it probably didn’t hit one the size of Manhattan. As oceans warm and global ambient temperatures rise, glaciers in Greenland and ice sheets in the Antarctic are calving bigger and more numerous icebergs. One the size of Manhattan floated free from Greenland in 2010, as seen in this video.
April 9, 2012
Fellow Story

Stabinsky analyzes new report from the Commission on Sustainable Agriculture and Climate Change

Last week, yet another high-level report on a topic of global concern was published by yet another group of eminent experts – this one on food security and climate change. The eminent experts – the Commission on Sustainable Agriculture and Climate Change – were assembled by a group of donor countries and the World Bank for the one-year task of producing the report and its recommendations. Read her full analysis
April 6, 2012
Fellow Story

Conroy's work teaching techniques to help people sustainably feed themselves subject of new slideshow

A new audio slideshow explores the work of UNH Professor Drew Conroy during the year he spent in Namibia, Africa. Conroy, a professor of applied animal science at the Thompson School of Applied Science, has traveled the world teaching about and researching techniques that are helping people to sustainably feed themselves. Watch the slideshow
April 4, 2012
Fellow Story

Conroy's work with Masai tribesmen from East Africa and their cattle featured

They could hardly have been more different, the nomadic Masai tribesmen from East Africa and the college professor from New Hampshire. Yet, as they sat around a campfire on a remote African savanna, it soon became clear that they all spoke the same timeless language: cattle.
April 2, 2012