Conservation
in sentence
382 examples of Conservation in a sentence
So much for
conservation
huh, Al? Anyway, it takes a mere minute to subjectively look at "An Inconvenient Truth" & discover the main fundamental flaw.
The story has been poisoned with paranoid idea's on the future, politics, governmental conspiracy's,
conservation
of the planet etc. etc. etc.. Flavoured with a little wormhole and spiced with a time paradox.
Some out-of-date references to energy conservation: so 70's.
Wilson, have reached out to religious communities to support the fight against human-induced climate change and the fight for biological conservation, and those religious communities have reached back in harmony with science.
It was not a physicist, but a biologist, Julius Meyer, who first proposed the law of
conservation
of energy from a study of biological energy processes.
After all, the state determines the supply of fiat money and is responsible for energy and natural-resource
conservation.
The question of how to guide an economy to produce sustainable happiness – combining material well-being with human health, environmental conservation, and psychological and cultural resiliency – is one that needs addressing everywhere.
But Bush has neither eliminated massive subsidies to the oil industry (though, fortunately, the Democratic Congress may take action) nor provided adequate incentives for
conservation.
For China’s effort to make Internet giants like Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft kowtow to its domestic political controls, and its push in Africa and Latin America to create blocs of nations that pursue economic development while ignoring human rights and environmental conservation, is a poor model for the developing world.
The EU should also launch a comprehensive study of all aspects of Europe’s reliance on Russian energy supplies, including transit, energy security and conservation, supply diversification, and the impact of “bypass” pipelines like Nord Stream and South Stream.
And if they develop renewable-energy sources and step up their
conservation
efforts, they can increase their energy exports.
Unfortunately, however, the industry is plagued by illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing, which undermines
conservation
efforts and handicaps honest fishers and businesses that follow the rules.
We can easily tally the costs of individual
conservation
efforts like saving the northern spotted owl.
But, while this implies that the benefits of
conservation
outstrip the costs by an extraordinary margin, the calculations have been widely criticized.
Germany, for example, is planning the world’s most ambitious low-carbon energy transition, based on energy
conservation
and renewables.
Even if China met its own targets for energy conservation, its emissions would increase by about 2.3 billion metric tons over the next five years – far larger than the 1.7 billion tons in cutbacks imposed by the Kyoto Protocol on the 37 developed “Annex 1” countries, including the US.
Yet they render invaluable services, in terms of preservation of agro- and biodiversity, local communities’ resilience to price shocks or weather-related events, and environmental
conservation.
The major meeting of the Convention on Biological Diversity taking place in Nagoya, Japan, from October 18-29, is an opportunity in this regard, and we at Kew are hopeful for positive outcomes in terms of international agreements in the key areas of biodiversity conservation, sustainable use and access, and benefit-sharing.
Meanwhile, at the national level, it is essential that biodiversity
conservation
is “mainstreamed,” becoming an integral part of government policy and sustainable management practices worldwide.
Effective
conservation
programs are based on sound scientific knowledge.
A deep understanding of plant science is essential in planning and executing
conservation
projects.
As a result, we now have a baseline from which to measure progress in plant
conservation
around the world.
We have the knowledge, expertise, and partnerships to make a very real positive difference to biodiversity
conservation
worldwide, and we welcome support from all parts of society to help us deliver this.
Committing the political will, and a small fraction of the world’s financial resources, to biodiversity
conservation
– and the scientific research that underpins it – would bring indispensable long-term benefits, including a healthy planet for our children.
Moreover, investing in forest
conservation
and sustainable land use is one of the most cost-effective means of mitigating climate change.
Research conducted in a variety of countries has shown that literate rural farmers manage systems and technologies (including water
conservation
and risk evaluation) more efficiently than their illiterate peers.
Water management should not be regarded as an end in itself – a single-variant solution for a single-variant problem – but as a means to several ends, including environmental
conservation
and social and economic development.
Such an approach would balance commercial returns with affordability, global access, and conservation, while saving governments money in the long run.
With his country so totally – indeed, embarrassingly – dependent on oil and gas revenues, he is hardly likely to want to spark a big push towards energy
conservation.
Reviving conservation, management, and distribution efforts could reduce water consumption and increase efficiency, but these measures need to be combined with radical reforms to speed the transition away from oil dependence to a zero-carbon renewable-energy infrastructure.
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