Press release from | No. 80/08

The Blue Angel - Active in Climate Protection

The Blue Angel is going to increasingly focus on climate protection: From the beginning of next year, the world’s oldest and most well-known eco-label will also be awarded to particularly energy-efficient and climate-friendly products and services and thus provide consumers with better purchase orientation. ”Germany’s Federal Environment Ministry, the Federal Environment Agency and the Environment... read more

Press release from | No. 79/2008

Germany now involved in more than 100 international climate protection projects

Since December 2005 the German Emissions Trading Authority (DEHSt) at the Federal Environment Agency (UBA) has authorised more than 100 climate protection projects in developing and emerging economies that comply with the Kyoto Protocol and are based on the so-called Clean Development Mechanism (CDM). This makes CDM, along with emissions trading, one of the most important climate protection instru... read more

Press release from | No. 78/08

Wood-fired heating: Not every type of fuel may be used in fireplace or tiled stove

Heating with wood is gentle on the climate because burning wood produces only as much carbon dioxide as the trees had previously sunk during their growth. However, under less-than-optimal conditions, incomplete combustion, or use of improper fuels, wood-fired heaters can emit large volumes of hazardous air pollutants, e.g. particulate matter or polycyclic  aromatic hydrocarbons that are harmful to... read more

Press release from | No. 77/08

Emissions trading: companies to receive certificates

The second phase of emissions trading, scheduled to run from 2008 to 2012, is beginning: as of now, certificates for 2008 are available to companies. ”The pressure to act on implementing more climate protection measures is mounting inasmuch as operators of inefficient lignite power stations will in some cases receive up to 50 per cent fewer certificates,” says Dr. Thomas Holzmann, Vice President o... read more

Press release from | No. 76/08

Emerging economies can also make a lasting contribution to climate protection

Emerging economies can also do their bit to meet global climate protection goals without fear of economic repercussions. This is the conclusion reached by a study conducted on behalf of the Federal Environment Agency (UBA), according to which the six economically developed countries of Brazil, China, India, Mexico, South Africa and South Korea dispose of vast emission reduction potential, which in... read more

Press release from | No. 74/08

Safe and ecologically just travel to Antarctica

Fascinating Antarctica: Ever more people are attracted to the austral summer in the vast expanses of the icy continent, to penguins, seals and whales. There were more than 46,000 visitors in last year’s travel season alone. There was a fivefold jump in visitor numbers from 1992 to 2008, making it impossible to avoid negative impact on the environment. Nevertheless, any visitor to the South Pole, w... read more

Press release from | No. 75/2008

Global warming: Water scarcity in the Alps?

Are the Alps as Europe’s ‘water towers’ at risk? Is the discharge rate of the Danube, Rhine, Rhone and Po, the four large rivers originating in the Alps, and which draw about 50 % of their water from the Alpine Rim, in a state of flux? According to experts who met a conference in Bolzano, there is no acute danger of this happening. ”Yet the Alpine region must now adapt to existing and future risks... read more

Press release from | No. 73/08

As concerns the ‘climate neutral’ notion: Preventing greenhouse gases is better than offsetting them

Offers to compensate for greenhouse gases voluntarily abound: whether it be the ‘climate neutral air trip’ or the ‘climate neutral bouquet of flowers’, everything is possible. The idea is simple, namely to compensate for the climate gas emissions produced by products or services by saving the same amount somewhere else. Making sense of all these new possibilities is possible thanks to a new guide... read more

The Umweltbundesamt

For our environment