Crown Capital Eco Management works with government bodies, international entities, private sectors and other non-governmental organizations in providing extensive information to the public, media and policymakers that are involved in addressing environmental issues and sustainable initiatives in a worldwide scale.
2. The Eco Values
• Crown Capital Eco Management works
with government bodies, international
entities, private sectors and other non-
governmental organizations in
providing extensive information to the
public, media and policymakers that are
involved in addressing environmental
issues and sustainable initiatives in a
worldwide scale.
3. Renewable energy would save EU trillions by 2050
• The energy shift would already create around
half a million extra jobs by 2020, Crown
researchers from German aerospace center
DLR, which also specializes in energy and
transport, found. It has legislated to ensure
that 20 percent of the energy mix is green by
the said year, as part of a set of three main
environmental goals. But it has yet to achieve
agreement on binding targets beyond 2020,
even though non-binding roadmaps have laid
out the need for a virtually carbon-free
electricity mix by 2050.
4. Human Thirst Makes Earth Quake
• As we all know earthquake is a catastrophic
natural disaster. Most earthquake-related
deaths are caused by the collapse of
structures and the construction practices play
a tremendous role in the death toll of an
earthquake. In southern Italy in 1909 more
than 100,000 people perished in an
earthquake that struck the region. Almost half
of the people living in the region of Messina
were killed due to the easily collapsible
structures that dominated the villages of the
region. Though there are some ways to
prevent this from happening, it can never be
considered as risk avoidance.
5. Flooded summer season, Atlantic Ocean blames
• Northern Europe picks on the Atlantic
Ocean because of its wet summer
according to a new study. The rising
and falling of ocean temperature or the
so called cyclical deception is seen as
a major extortion on the weather. The
said pattern reported will last long as
the Atlantic warming persists. The
research was carried out at the
University of Reading and is published
in the journal Nature Geoscience.
7. • Yevgeny Salinder, an 11-year old
Russian boy, is the one who discovered
the massive remains of the mammoth
in August.
• The mammoth, estimated to be at its 16
year when it died measured 2 meters
and weighed 1,000 pounds, was
excavated from the Siberian permafrost
last month.
• ”It is the mammoth of the century,” said
Professor Alexei Tikhonov of the
Zoological Museum in St Petersburg.
8. Protein to combat reef-destroying starfish
• A group of scientists in Australia has
announced this week an potentially
effective way to eliminate the
destructive starfish, crown of thorns,
that are feasting on coral reefs in the
Pacific ocean.
• The crown of thorns is already
prominent in the Pacific and Indian
Ocean where they feed mainly on coral
polyps. Outbreaks of the large and
poisonous starfish are blamed for the
massive destruction of corals.
9. Mini satellite from Japan will send Morse
• Five small low-cost satellites are
deployed today from the ISS to conduct
scientific missions and test a possible
type of optical communication scheme.
• CubeSats, palm-sized satellites
measuring 4 inches, are solar-powered
cubes that will orbit the Earth for the
next 100 days.
• One of the satellites launched was a
Japanese one tasked with sending a
Morse code message that would be
seen across the world.
11. • Mars Curiosity rover is scheduled for a
stopover to scrutinize the pyramid-
shaped rock on the planet’s
surface.The rock, measuring around 16
inches at the base and 10 inches high
is chosen for analysis due to its
unusual shape, was named “Jake” in
memory of Jet Propulsion Lab
engineer-mathematician Jacob
Matijevic who died several days after
the spacecraft’s landing on Mars.
12. A solution for Asian carp infestation
• Brought from the East to aid in
managing aquatic plants in aquaculture
industries, Asian carp has been
unwittingly introduced to freshwater
sources of the US. Today, they are
seen as a big problem in the fishing
industry for their big appetite and fast
breeding, overshadowing other fish for
space and food in lakes.
13. Beeswax discovered as ancient tooth filling
• An ancient tooth patched with beeswax filling
and was recovered from Slovenia a hundred
years ago could very well be the oldest
evidence of ancient dentistry.
• According to a report by researchers
published in the PLoS ONE journal last
week, the beeswax filling is 6,500 years old
and was applied on a tooth recovered from
Italy. It was estimated that the person who
owned it could be in his 20s. Furthermore,
the extreme wear on the tooth is evident of
other activities like making tools, weaving
and softening leather where it was used,
aside from eating.