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Earth Alive Clean Technologies Inc V.EAC

Alternate Symbol(s):  EACTF

Earth Alive Clean Technologies Inc. is engaged in microorganism-based technologies. Its advanced products contribute to regenerative agriculture, natural dust suppression with minimal water consumption, and ecological and human-friendly industrial cleaning. It sells the microbial spores in their primary or blended form and in ready-to-use powdered or liquid formulations. Its segments include Agriculture and Mines-Infrastructure. The Agriculture segment provides environmentally friendly products for retail and industrial use, such as fertilizers and soil amendments. The Mines-Infrastructure segment provides a biodegradable microbial product that abates dust. Its flagship ea1 microbial dust suppressant is used in the mining and other industrial sectors as an environmentally sustainable alternative to the use of scarce water resources and harmful chemicals. The Company also specializes in biodegradable lubricants and excels in converting various equipment from mineral to biological.


TSXV:EAC - Post by User

Post by fredskion Sep 27, 2016 2:51pm
64 Views
Post# 25282731

World must sustainably produce 70 per cent more food

World must sustainably produce 70 per cent more foodWorld must sustainably produce 70 per cent more food by mid-century – UN report

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3 December 2013 –The world will need 70 per cent more food, as measured by calories, to feed a global population of 9.6 billion in 2050, and must achieve this through improvements in the way people produce and consume, according to a report released today by the United Nations and its partners.

“Over the next several decades, the world faces a grand challenge – and opportunity – at the intersection of food security, development and the environment,” said Andrew Steer, President of the World Resources Institute (WRI), which produced the report along with UN agencies and the World Bank.

“To meet human needs, we must close the 70 per cent gap between the food we will need and the food available today. But, we must do so in a way that creates opportunities for the rural poor, limits clearing of forests, and reduces greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture,” Dr. Steer said.

The report, entitled “World Resources Report: Creating a Sustainable Food Future,” finds that boosting crop and livestock productivity on existing agricultural land is critical to saving forests and reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

It cautions, however, that the world is unlikely to close the food gap through yield increases alone, which would have to greatly outpace previous advances to keep up. For that reason, it recommends reducing food loss and waste, reducing excessive demand for animal products and following other “climate-smart” guidelines.

“From reducing food waste to improving agricultural practices, feeding a growing population requires working on several fronts at the same time,” said Juergen Voegele, World Bank Director for Agriculture and Environmental Services.

“Applying the principles of climate smart agriculture across landscapes – that means crops, livestock, forests and fisheries – has the potential to sustainably increase food security, enhance resilience and reduce agriculture’s carbon footprint. Pursuing this approach is not a luxury, it’s an imperative.”

The report also recommends achieving replacement-level fertility, a rate it says most of the world is nearing by educating girls, reducing child mortality and providing access to reproductive health services.

Given currently-projected growth, however, sub-Saharan Africa will need to more than triple its crop production by 2050 to provide adequate food per capita.

The UN Development Programme (UNDP) and the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) also contributed to the report, the final version of which will be released in mid-2014.

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