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“Many people praise and acknowledge the healing power of plants, but few people actually take action to prevent their extension by planting and conserving them for future generations.” (Ernest Rukangira )

Sunday, 27 July 2014

WSSCC News - May 2014

May 2014

New Resources:

WSSCC Jobs & Opportunities

 

Latest News

·         Capacity, knowledge and documentation in sanitation and hygiene – calling for harmonisation and coordination

·         New grant opportunity on impact evaluation in sanitation

·         Watch live on 28 May: UN breaks the silence on open defecation!

·         WSSCC supports Kenya's First National Annual Conference on Sanitation & Hygiene

·         Call for Entries: 2014 WASH Media Awards

·         New UNICEF/WHO report says WASH gains mask growing inequalities

·         SWA meeting yields new promises of access, growth and equality

·         Menstrual Hygiene Day is 28 May!

 


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Capacity, knowledge and documentation in sanitation and hygiene – calling for harmonisation and coordination

 

More and more organisations working in sanitation and hygiene support the vision that equitable and sustainable sanitation and hygiene behaviour change and services at scale should be delivered through locally driven and locally sustained institutions, mechanisms and service providers. This calls for strengthening these institutions, mechanisms and providers at the level where they operate, regionally, nationally and locally, with an emphasis on Africa and Asia. Read more.

 

New grant opportunity on impact evaluation in sanitation

 

WSSCC has announced a Call For Proposals (CFP) for grant support for work relating to the 'design and implementation of impact evaluation of sanitation and hygiene programmes'.  The deadline for submissions is June 15, 2014. Read more.

 


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Watch live on 28 May: UN breaks the silence on open defecation!

 

The United Nations and its partners, including WSSCC, will hold a press briefing and campaign launch at UN Headquarters on 28 May 2014 to help end the practice of open defecation and improve access to toilets and latrines for the 2.5 billion people without basic level sanitation. Read more.

 

WSSCC supports Kenya's First National Annual Conference on Sanitation & Hygiene

 

WSSCC was a supporting partner for Kenya's First National Annual Conference on Sanitation & Hygiene, which took place 1-3 April 2014 in Nairobi. Read more

 


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Call for Entries: 2014 WASH Media Awards

 

WSSCC and Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI) welcome entries for the 5th WASH Media Awards. The competition promotes coverage of WASH issues in the local, national and international media. Prize winners will receive a cash award and the opportunity to participate in the World Water Week in Stockholm. The deadline for entries is 15 June 2014. Read more.

 

New UNICEF/WHO report says WASH gains mask growing inequalities

 

Inequalities in access to clean drinking water and sanitation persist and in some cases are getting worse, although close to two billion people globally have gained access to clean drinking water and sanitation since 1990, according to the new Joint Monitoring Programme report from WHO and UNICEF. Read more.

 


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SWA meeting yields new promises of access, growth and equality

 

WSSCC was active at the April Sanitation and Water for All High Level Meeting in Washington, DC, where top international development experts and government finance ministers from nearly 50 developing countries endorsed a set of commitments designed to speed up access to improved sanitation and drinking water. Read more.

 


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Menstrual Hygiene Day is 28 May!

 

Menstrual Hygiene Day (MHM) on 28 May is a new milestone day designed to help break the silence and confront the taboos that often prohibit girls and women from reaching their full potential. Developed by WASH United, MHM Day will see activities taking place around the world, including Kenya, where WSSCC National Coordinator Tobias Omufwoko will participate in the main national event in Taharaka Nithi County. Read more

 



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15, chemin Louis-Dunant - 1202 Geneva - Switzerland - www.wsscc.org

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UFRO Spotlight #23: Eucalyptus genome successfully sequenced

 

 

IUFRO Spotlight

 

 

IUFRO Spotlight is an initiative of the International Union of Forest Research Organizations. Its aim is to introduce, in a timely fashion, significant findings in forest research from IUFRO officeholders and member organizations to a worldwide network of decision makers, policy makers and researchers.

IUFRO will encapsulate, and distribute in plain language, brief, topical and policy-relevant highlights of those findings, along with information on where/how to access the full documents. The IUFRO Spotlight findings will be distributed in a periodic series of emails as well as blog postings.

 

 

Eucalyptus genome successfully sequenced

PDF for download

With a result that offers major potential for the forest industry, an international team of researchers has successfully sequenced and analyzed the genome of Eucalyptus grandis.

"Now that we understand which genes determine specific characteristics in these trees, we will be able to breed trees that grow faster, have higher quality wood and use water and land more efficiently," said the lead investigator on the project, Prof. Zander Myburg of the University of Pretoria, South Africa.

 "This will also allow us to breed trees better able to cope with future climate change scenarios. In the future, we may even be able to develop and manage eucalyptus plantations as 'bio-factories' to produce specific kinds of sought-after materials and chemicals."

Current uses for Eucalyptus, in addition to timber, pulp and paper, include eucalyptus oil used for cleaning and as an industrial solvent, as an antiseptic, for deodorizing, and in cough drops, toothpaste and decongestants. It is also an active ingredient in some commercial mosquito repellents. Increasingly Eucalyptus is being looked at for chemical cellulose, used in a wide variety of industrial products from textiles to pharmaceuticals.

Native to Australia, these trees have been introduced worldwide, mainly in tropical and sub-tropical countries – though they can be found along North America's Pacific coast as far north as British Columbia.

Eucalyptus species and hybrids make up the most widely planted hardwood crop globally (over 20 million ha). Eucalypt plantations are grown in over 90 countries as short rotation (6-9 years) wood fibre crops. Their high productivity means there is less reliance and pressure on natural forests, especially in developing countries, where most eucalyptus plantations are grown, Prof. Myburg added.

This is only the second hardwood tree genome (Populus was the first) to be sequenced.

Prof. Myburg said being able to compare it to other trees such as Populus, willow, spruce and pine will allow us to study the unique biology of these large, long-lived plants that are keystone species for many of the earth's ecosystems.

"Once we are able to boost the growth and wood properties of Eucalyptus, the same techniques can be applied to other woody plants with potential as biomass feedstock species for the post-petroleum economy," he said.

What this achievement underlines is "that forest tree research has entered the post-genomics age," Prof. Myburg added. "We can look toward technology development … (to come up with) solutions for threats like climate change, pests and diseases, and breed trees with enhanced growth and wood properties for a sustainable forest products industry."

Already many international research teams are using the genome sequence as a reference for gene function studies and as a resource for molecular breeding of eucalyptus trees for enhanced growth, wood formation, disease resistance and abiotic responses to drought, cold and salinity, among other things.

The project was funded by the U.S Department of Energy, Joint Genome Institute (DOE-JGI). An international team of 80 researchers at more than 30 institutions (several of which are IUFRO member organizations) in 18 countries participated in the project. It took them five years to sequence and analyze the 640-million base pair genome.

The findings are available online: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v510/n7505/full/nature13308.html, and also in the June 19 edition of the journal Nature.

 

 

 

The International Union of Forest Research Organizations (IUFRO) is the only worldwide organization devoted to forest research and related sciences. Its members are research institutions, universities, and individual scientists as well as decision-making authorities and other stakeholders with a focus on forests and trees. Visit: http://www.iufro.org/

 

 

IUFRO Spotlight #23, published in June 2014
by IUFRO Headquarters, Vienna, Austria.
Available for download at: http://www.iufro.org/media/iufro-spotlights/
Contact the editor at office(at)iufro.org or visit http://www.iufro.org/

If you do not wish to receive IUFRO Spotlight publications, please email us at: office(at)iufro.org

Imprint: http://www.iufro.org/legal/#c18944

 

FW: Youth climate stories featured in Times Square

 

July 25, 2014

 

 

 

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Youth climate stories featured in Times Square

 Sport4Climate

Connect4Climate has partnered with MTV Voices to celebrate youth climate action documentaries, exhibiting a 30 second compilation of Action4Climate competition submissions on two massive Broadway displays on Times Square. From 22 July until 29 July 2014, the youth stories will be presented on LED displays that are positioned in the heart of Times Square at 1515 Broadway.

See the stories and share your own #Action4Climate.

 

Action4Climate stories mapped

Improved cookstoves in Rwanda. Photograph: Alphonse Karenzi/Connect4Climate

After the Action4Climate competition closed on April 1, the Connect4Climate team was thrilled to realize that Action4Climate received more than 230 entries from 70 countries - and every inhabited continent in the world. With such diverse stories, we wanted to make an interactive map to showcase the films.

Click around the map, and watch the videos (including the highlights in red) to hear what youth worldwide are saying about climate change.

 

The fight against desertification is working

Victoria Burns and her mother in Kiribati. Photo: Victoria Burns 

Every year, 24 billion tons of fertile soils are lost to erosion while 12 million hectares of land are degraded through drought and the encroachment of desert. With every hectare of land lost, we also lose tons of potential grain, which makes life even more of an ordeal for the 1.5 billion people worldwide who make their living off degraded land.

But as we celebrate World Desertification Day this year, there is also new hope as two billion hectares of degraded land have the potential to be restored.

Read more to find out how threatened land is being protected.

 

 

 

 

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