Sunday, January 1, 2012
DoE celebrates gold medal beer
Sunday, December 18, 2011
Fishing ban extended for the Nassau Grouper
December 17, 2011
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Plastic-free Saturdays begin
December 7, 2011
Beginning this weekend, every second Saturday of each month will be plastic bag-free days in the Cayman Islands.
Last year, local supermarkets replaced their nondegradable plastic shopping bags with biodegradable alternatives and started charging 5 cents per shopping bags in a bid to cut down on the number of bags ending up in Cayman’s landfill.
That first phase of the Cayman BECOME campaign brought an initial reduction of as much as 80 per cent in the number of plastic bags sold in supermarkets. Prior to that, an estimated 12 million plastic bags were being disposed of every year in Grand Cayman.
Now the Corporate Green Team Network is embarking on the next phase to cut down on the amount of plastic finding its way to Mount Trashmore.
Starting this Saturday, 10 December, on every second Saturday of every month, supermarkets will not hand out any plastic shopping bags, in a bid to encourage shoppers to either bring their own bags from home or purchase environmentally-friendly, re-usable bags. Read the whole story here.
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Eco-initiatives in the Caribbean
December 4, 2011
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| The new spa at Jalousie Plantation on St. Lucia was built from indigenous woods. |
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Why Republican attacks on environment laws are flawed
The GuardianTuesday 15 November 2011
In recent months, some in Congress have been waging a whole-scale war against the Environmental Protection Agency. By now it has reached comical dimensions, with three separate bills aimed at preventing a so-called EPA "dust rule" that has never even existed.
The spectacle would indeed be funny, if it wasn't deadly serious. Republicans in Congress and in the GOP presidential debates are seeking to defund an already cash-strapped EPA under the pretense of caring about the federal deficit and are trying to hamper the agency by arguing that its rules hurt the economy.
Quite to the contrary. We have 40 years of data to show that a cleaner environment goes hand in hand with solid economic growth. Read the whole story here.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Losing ecosystems will be costly
Caymanian Compass
15 September, 2011
Putting an economic value on the Cayman Islands’ ecosystem and its marine wildlife could be the argument that convinces the government and opponents to conservation of the importance of preserving the environment, attendees of a public meeting on marine parks heard this week.
John Turner of Bangor University’s School of Ocean Sciences, who is working with the Department of Environment on a study of the Cayman Islands’ marine parks, said a study of the value of the world’s ecosystems in 1997 showed they were worth US$33 trillion per year, almost double the whole world’s annual gross domestic product.
He said a rough calculation of the value of single stingray locally was US$600,000 per year and that coral reefs were valued at about US$6,000 per hectare per year.
He was responding to a suggestion from audience member Suzanne Bothwell, who said if people understood the economic impact of losing the local marine ecosystem, they would more fully support conservation measures. Read more...


