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Cost-effective pasture management practices in Kyrgyzstan are helping to reduce negative impacts of livestock grazing on land and improve rural livelihoods.
The project is also working on attracting farmers to distant pastures by installing green technologies, including six mini hydropower stations and 18 solar energy stations. This equipment helps to improve the livelihoods of families and shepherds working in distant pastures.
Find out more about farmers gaining access to traditional lands for growing crops in Kyrygzstan
Photo courtesy of UNDP in Kyrgyzstan
Cost-effective pasture management practices in Kyrgyzstan are helping to reduce negative impacts of livestock grazing on land and improve rural livelihoods.
The project is also working on attracting farmers to distant pastures by installing green technologies, including six mini hydropower stations and 18 solar energy stations. This equipment helps to improve the livelihoods of families and shepherds working in distant pastures.
Find out more about farmers gaining access to traditional lands for growing crops in Kyrygzstan
Photo courtesy of UNDP in Kyrgyzstan
Cost-effective pasture management practices in Kyrgyzstan are helping to reduce negative impacts of livestock grazing on land and improve rural livelihoods.
The project is also working on attracting farmers to distant pastures by installing green technologies, including six mini hydropower stations and 18 solar energy stations. This equipment helps to improve the livelihoods of families and shepherds working in distant pastures.
Find out more about farmers gaining access to traditional lands for growing crops in Kyrygzstan
Photo courtesy of UNDP in Kyrgyzstan
Photo © Ana Lisa Alperovich for Inhabitat
Another project that focuses on drying, grinding and binding waste food is by Erik de Laurens, who created a plastic-like material made entirely from fish scales! This new graduate is looking for funding to extend his idea, which has been designed to be sustainable, local and for small-scale production.
Cost-effective pasture management practices in Kyrgyzstan are helping to reduce negative impacts of livestock grazing on land and improve rural livelihoods.
The project is also working on attracting farmers to distant pastures by installing green technologies, including six mini hydropower stations and 18 solar energy stations. This equipment helps to improve the livelihoods of families and shepherds working in distant pastures.
Find out more about farmers gaining access to traditional lands for growing crops in Kyrygzstan
Photo courtesy of UNDP in Kyrgyzstan
CHINA HONG KONG 26MAY10 - Lighting of the iconic skyline of the highrise buildings in central on Hong Kong island, overlooking Victoria Harbour.
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac
© Jiri Rezac 2010
CHINA SHANGHAI HONGQIAO 19MAY10 - Installation of solar photovoltaic panels on the roofs of the Hongqiao Passenger Rail Terminal in Shanghai, China. There are a total of 23000 solar panels planned for the CECIC-funded project, each panel with a production capacity of 280 KWh to feed into the electricity grid.
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac
© Jiri Rezac 2010
A summary on the benefits for Albanians on the use of solar power in their day-to-day life.
View a bigger version of this infographic on Visual.ly.
Cost-effective pasture management practices in Kyrgyzstan are helping to reduce negative impacts of livestock grazing on land and improve rural livelihoods.
The project is also working on attracting farmers to distant pastures by installing green technologies, including six mini hydropower stations and 18 solar energy stations. This equipment helps to improve the livelihoods of families and shepherds working in distant pastures.
Find out more about farmers gaining access to traditional lands for growing crops in Kyrygzstan
Photo courtesy of UNDP in Kyrgyzstan
CHINA SHANGHAI HONGQIAO 19MAY10 - Installation of solar photovoltaic panels on the roofs of the Hongqiao Passenger Rail Terminal in Shanghai, China. There are a total of 23000 solar panels planned for the CECIC-funded project, each panel with a production capacity of 280 KWh to feed into the electricity grid.
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac
© Jiri Rezac 2010
CHINA SHANGHAI PUDONG 24MAY10 - The Shanghai World Financial Centre in Pudong, Shanghai. With a roof height of 492 metres, it is the third largest building in the world and the largest structure in China. It is a mixed use skyscraper which consists of offices, hotels, conference rooms, observation decks, and shopping malls on the ground floors...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2010
Nearly 2,000 panels sit atop the post gymnasium at Presidio of Monterey in Monterey, Calif., shown January 26, 2012. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Sacramento District oversaw placement of the panels, completed in early April 2012 and part of a $2 million project to provide up to an estimated 660,000 kilowatts of power a year. (Photo courtesy of DRI Energy)
After over 5 years of effort the renew units finally hit the streets of London. Part of the testing phase.
Cost-effective pasture management practices in Kyrgyzstan are helping to reduce negative impacts of livestock grazing on land and improve rural livelihoods.
The project is also working on attracting farmers to distant pastures by installing green technologies, including six mini hydropower stations and 18 solar energy stations. This equipment helps to improve the livelihoods of families and shepherds working in distant pastures.
Find out more about farmers gaining access to traditional lands for growing crops in Kyrygzstan
Photo courtesy of UNDP in Kyrgyzstan
CHINA SHANGHAI HONGQIAO 19MAY10 - Installation of solar photovoltaic panels on the roofs of the Hongqiao Passenger Rail Terminal in Shanghai, China. There are a total of 23000 solar panels planned for the CECIC-funded project, each panel with a production capacity of 280 KWh to feed into the electricity grid.
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac
© Jiri Rezac 2010
Nothing feels like Sun-dried cotton clothes! Not to mention it is eco-friendly.
Nikon D700 + Nikkor AF-S 14-24mm F2.8. At 14mm, the lens has low distortion, but you have to be perfectly orthogonal to the plane of your scene to avoid bent lines. Here, I wasn't trying to be perfect – that's tough to do without a tripod anyway, so I was more interested in the overall image, and didn't mind a few bent lines.
(_ND72950)
2021-01-26: Ibrahim Thiaw, UN Secretary-General as Executive Secretary of the UNCCD; Daviz Simango, Mayor of Berira, Mozambique; H.E Jeanne D'Arc Mujawamariya, Minister of Enviornment, Rawanda during the virtual meeting on Climate Adaptation Summit : Accelerating African Adaptation
Cost-effective pasture management practices in Kyrgyzstan are helping to reduce negative impacts of livestock grazing on land and improve rural livelihoods.
The project is also working on attracting farmers to distant pastures by installing green technologies, including six mini hydropower stations and 18 solar energy stations. This equipment helps to improve the livelihoods of families and shepherds working in distant pastures.
Find out more about farmers gaining access to traditional lands for growing crops in Kyrygzstan
Photo courtesy of UNDP in Kyrgyzstan
Suusamy village
Cost-effective pasture management practices in Kyrgyzstan are helping to reduce negative impacts of livestock grazing on land and improve rural livelihoods.
The project is also working on attracting farmers to distant pastures by installing green technologies, including six mini hydropower stations and 18 solar energy stations. This equipment helps to improve the livelihoods of families and shepherds working in distant pastures.
Find out more about farmers gaining access to traditional lands for growing crops in Kyrygzstan
Photo courtesy of UNDP in Kyrgyzstan
The historic COP21 climate meeting in Paris. Great photo moments and video. Open to connect.
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Photo © Ana Lisa Alperovich for Inhabitat
By designing pressed metal joints for building bamboo frameworks to try to reduce poverty and bad living conditions, Central St. Martins’ graduate Sang Min Yu created Relieving Poverty through Design. A project designed for giving South East Asia’s rural communities a chance to work with local materials and produce furniture themselves. This project allows them to be self-sufficient, engaged and be responsible for their local living areas.