Cuando se habla acerca de eco eficiencia en empresas se debe, necesariamente considerar diversos aspectos, más allá de solo los más evidentes: agua, energía, residuos. Es necesario voltear a ver el compromiso y cultura de los empleados. Si deseamos que se haga un uso responsable de los recursos al interior de la organización es vital que este mismo cuidado se tenga fuera de las actividades cotidianas de los empleados, por supuesto que analizar esto es una tarea titánica, pero quien dijo que mejorar una cultura es sencillo, a veces toma dos o tres generaciones, así que si nuestro objetivo fue reducir en un 20% la impresión en un año o en un 10% el consumo de energía en el área, es mejor que leamos este artículo y ver como lo podemos replantear, no decimos que sea imposible solo que debemos de considerar muchos más elementos y no solo los técnicos.
Según la definición del Programa Ambiental de las Naciones Unidas (UNEP por sus siglas en inglés), la eco eficiencia es “la aplicación continua de una estrategia preventiva e integrada a los procesos tendiente a reducir los riesgos para los humanos y el ambiente”, se puede aplicar en sector comercial, industrial y servicios para incrementar la competitividad de las organizaciones.

 

Read more ...

Fact: More carbon dioxide (CO2) in the air also acidifies the oceans. It seemed to be the logical conclusion that shellfish and corals will suffer, because chalk formation becomes more difficult in more acidic seawater. But now a group of Dutch and Japanese scientists discovered to their own surprise that some tiny unicellular shellfish make better shells in an acidic environment. This is a completely new insight.

Researchers from the NIOZ (Royal Dutch Institute for Sea Research) and JAMSTEC (Japanese Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology) found in their experiments that so-called foraminifera might even make their shells better in more acidic water. These single-celled foraminifera shellfish occur in huge numbers in the oceans. The results of the study are published in the leading scientific journal ‘Nature Communications’.

Read more ...

A Japanese research group has used a new technology that identifies multiple fish species populating local areas by analyzing DNA samples from seawater, and proved that this method is accurate and more effective than visual observation.

This research was carried out as part of the Japan Science and Technology Strategic Basic Research Programs by a group including Academic Researcher YAMAMOTO Satoshi (Kobe University Graduate School of Human Development and Environment), Associate Professor MASUDA Reiji (Kyoto University), Professor ARAKI Hitoshi (Hokkaido University), Professor KONDOH Michio (Ryukoku University), Project Assistant Professor MINAMOTO Toshifumi (Kobe University Graduate School of Human Development and Environment), and Adjunct Associate Professor MIYA Masaki (Head of Department of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Natural History Museum and Institute, Chiba).

Read more ...

An international team of researchers has discovered why fresh water, melted from Antarctic ice sheets, is often detected below the surface of the ocean, rather than rising to the top above denser seawater. The team found that the Earth’s rotation influences the way meltwater behaves – keeping it at depths of several hundred metres. The research is published this week in the journal Nature in association with colleagues at University of Southampton, National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, University of East Anglia (UEA), British Antarctic Survey (BAS) and Stockholm University.

Read more ...

More Articles ...

Subcategories