Displaying 1 - 11 of 11
1
Article
Sponsored: We all depend on healthy forests — and so does our economy. Here are key lessons from a company aiming to counteract deforestation for their products.
by James McCall
2
Article
A progress report on promises around national emission-reductions targets, adaptation finance, methane emissions, deforestation and phasing out coal.
3
Article
The Science-Based Targets initiative (SBTi) asked food, agriculture and land-use companies to commit to ending deforestation by 2025.
by Amber Rolt
4
Article
Brazil single-handedly accounted for over a third of all loss of humid tropical primary forests worldwide, with more primary forest lost than any other tropical country in 2019.
5
Article
And only 8 percent of global companies involved in the production of commodities associated with deforestation have publicly committed to ending it.
by Steve Zwick
6
Article
Scores of companies have made hundreds of deforestation commitments, and almost 60 percent of those commitments have a deadline of 2020 or earlier.
by Steve Zwick
7
Article
As companies such as Walmart, Nestlé and Unilever vow to combat deforestation, a few key actions would make an outsized impact.
8
Article
A new study calls out PepsiCo, Colgate-Palmolive and Johnson & Johnson for stalled efforts.
by James Murray
9
Article
The New York Declaration in September catalyzed political and corporate action, firmly moving deforestation into the mainstream.
by Will Nichols
10
Article
That's what a new report found by digging into the disclosures from 152 companies, including APP, Cargill and Unilever.
by Mike Hower
11
Article
A total of 34 companies signed the New York Declaration on Forests this week at the United Nations Climate Summit in New York.
by Mike Hower