An environmental ministry is a national or subnational government agency politically responsible for the environment and/or natural resources. Various other names are commonly used to identify such agencies, such as Ministry of the Environment, Department of the Environment, Department for the Environment, Department of Environmental Protection, Department of Natural Resources, and so forth. Such agencies typically address environmental concerns such as the maintenance of environmental quality, nature preserves, the sustained use of natural resources, and prevention of pollution or contamination of the natural environment. Following is a list of environmental ministries by country:
The Department of Conservation (DOC) (Māori: Te Papa Atawhai) is the public service department of New Zealand charged with the conservation of New Zealand's natural and historical heritage.
An advisory body, the New Zealand Conservation Authority (NZCA) is provided to advise DOC and its ministers. In addition there are 13 conservation boards for different areas around the country that provide for interaction between DOC and the public.
As a consequence of Conservation Act all Crown land in New Zealand designated for conservation and protection became managed by the Department of Conservation. This is about 30% of New Zealand's land area or about 8 million hectares of native forests, tussocklands, alpine areas, wetlands, dunelands, estuaries, lakes and islands, national forests, maritime parks, marine reserves, nearly 4000 reserves, river margins, some coastline, and many offshore islands. All of the land under its control is protected for either conservation, ecological, scenic, scientific, historic or cultural reasons, and for recreation.
The Department of Conservation and Land Management (DCLM, but more often called CALM) was a department of the Government of Western Australia that was responsible for implementing the state's conservation and environment legislation and regulations.
The Department of Conservation and Land Management was responsible from 22 March 1985 to 30 June 2006 for protecting and conserving the State of Western Australia’s environment, this includes managing the State's National Parks, Marine parks, Conservation Parks, State Forests, Timber Reserves and Nature Reserves.
Preceding agencies
Earlier forms of Nature conservation in Western Australia were under:
Department of Lands and Surveys: 1 January 1890 - (partly split) 31 December 1895
Wood and Forests Department: 1 January 1896 – 31 December 1918
Your places, your choices: An introduction to Conservation Management Strategies
Conservation Management Strategies (CMS) are a chance for New Zealanders to have their say on places and species they value. Department of Conservation (DOC) Programme Manager Kerry Swadling explains how DOC has produced maps with conservation priorities and now needs input from communities on what is important to them. For more visit http://www.doc.govt.nz/cms
published: 23 May 2011
Intro to Conservation and Land Management
This is an introduction to the Diploma of Conservation and Land Management delivered online by Tocal College. For more information go www.tocal.nsw.edu.au.
published: 10 Dec 2012
Customer Success Story: Department Of Conservation (Predator Free 2050)
published: 01 Apr 2019
Conservation & the Bureau of Land Management | Pew & This American Land (Short Version)
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) oversees 246 million acres of the nation’s public land—from ecologically diverse southwestern deserts, to panoramic red rock country, to the sage-steppe, to Alaska’s boreal forest.
Originally, the intent was to develop these lands for oil, gas, and mining, as well as use them for their range land resources. In recent decades, however, there has been an evolution in response to public opinion. Hunters, fishermen, hikers, campers, and more outdoor enthusiasts all enjoy these public lands. As a result, the BLM is placing more emphasis on conservation.
More video and facts on the Pew Charitable Trusts’ America’s Western Lands project: http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/projects/americas-western-lands
TRANSCRIPT:
[John Stansfield speaking]
My wife Carolyn...
published: 20 Apr 2016
Department of Conservation | BlueWorx | Case Study Full
New Zealand's Department of Conservation (DOC) is a flagship BlueWorx customer with hundreds of remote field users across the country. BlueWorx was so easy to use, it practically did the change management for them.
In this video we gather feedback from DOC people - Mike Edginton (CIO), Carl McGuinness (Director, Operations Planning), Mike Hopkins (Enterprise Resource Planning Team Lead), Ben Goggins (ERP Technical Support) and Shay Van Der Hurk (DOC Ranger). To understand why they chose to use BlueWorx and the impact the solution has had on the organisation and their people.
published: 25 Sep 2019
Landowner Profile: Wetlands
Discover how the assistance of MDC's Private Lands Program helped transform a previously flooded soybean field into a haven for wildlife.
For more info: https://mdc.mo.gov/property/improve-my-property
published: 11 Sep 2020
Conservation & the Bureau of Land Management | Pew & This American Land (Long Version)
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) oversees 246 million acres of the nation’s public land—from ecologically diverse southwestern deserts, to panoramic red rock country, to the sage-steppe, to Alaska’s boreal forest.
Originally, the intent was to develop these lands for oil, gas, and mining, as well as use them for their range land resources. In recent decades, however, there has been an evolution in response to public opinion. Hunters, fishermen, hikers, campers, and more outdoor enthusiasts all enjoy these public lands. As a result, the BLM is placing more emphasis on conservation.
More video and facts on the Pew Charitable Trusts’ America’s Western Lands project: http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/projects/americas-western-lands
published: 20 Apr 2016
Accredited Compensatory Afforestation | Accreditation of Compensatory Afforestation | EA 281
Conservation of forest, forest conservation act, forest conservation act 1980, Forest (Conservation) Rules 2022, Forest Conservation Rules 2022, afforestation, accredited compensatory afforestation, accreditation of compensatory afforestation, compensatory afforestation accreditation, afforestation meaning, types of afforestation, Compensatory Afforestation Fund, National CAMPA Advisory Council (NCAC), Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act 2016
This video addresses:
"What are the three types of afforestation?"
"What are the government schemes for afforestation?"
“What type of land can be used for compensatory afforestation?”
What are the problems with compensatory afforestation?
Which ministry regulates the Campa Fund?
Which act is under Campa?
The Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act, 201...
published: 01 Sep 2024
Department of Conservation and National Resources 8-14-18
Bill Vitale and Greg Czarnecki talk about the Department of Conservation and national resources.
The Queensland Government’s Skilling Queenslanders for Work initiative has helped more than 13,000 disadvantaged Queensland jobseekers gain a career. Community-...
Conservation Management Strategies (CMS) are a chance for New Zealanders to have their say on places and species they value. Department of Conservation (DOC) Pr...
Conservation Management Strategies (CMS) are a chance for New Zealanders to have their say on places and species they value. Department of Conservation (DOC) Programme Manager Kerry Swadling explains how DOC has produced maps with conservation priorities and now needs input from communities on what is important to them. For more visit http://www.doc.govt.nz/cms
Conservation Management Strategies (CMS) are a chance for New Zealanders to have their say on places and species they value. Department of Conservation (DOC) Programme Manager Kerry Swadling explains how DOC has produced maps with conservation priorities and now needs input from communities on what is important to them. For more visit http://www.doc.govt.nz/cms
This is an introduction to the Diploma of Conservation and Land Management delivered online by Tocal College. For more information go www.tocal.nsw.edu.au.
This is an introduction to the Diploma of Conservation and Land Management delivered online by Tocal College. For more information go www.tocal.nsw.edu.au.
This is an introduction to the Diploma of Conservation and Land Management delivered online by Tocal College. For more information go www.tocal.nsw.edu.au.
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) oversees 246 million acres of the nation’s public land—from ecologically diverse southwestern deserts, to panoramic red...
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) oversees 246 million acres of the nation’s public land—from ecologically diverse southwestern deserts, to panoramic red rock country, to the sage-steppe, to Alaska’s boreal forest.
Originally, the intent was to develop these lands for oil, gas, and mining, as well as use them for their range land resources. In recent decades, however, there has been an evolution in response to public opinion. Hunters, fishermen, hikers, campers, and more outdoor enthusiasts all enjoy these public lands. As a result, the BLM is placing more emphasis on conservation.
More video and facts on the Pew Charitable Trusts’ America’s Western Lands project: http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/projects/americas-western-lands
TRANSCRIPT:
[John Stansfield speaking]
My wife Carolyn and I love to hike here in Beaver Creek on the wild south slope of pike's peak in central Colorado. My name is John Stansfield. I'm a writer and an outdoorsman. Across the West, there are many areas like Beaver Creek that have lots of wilderness quality. They are administered by the Bureau of Land Management.
[Ann Morgan speaking]
The Bureau of Land Management is an agency in the Department of the Interior. They manage 245 million acres of public lands, along with all of the resources to go along with that—the wildlife, the wilderness, the minerals. My name is Ann Morgan, and I'm a public lands consultant. It's everything from red rock deserts, to high mountain peaks, to old growth forests, to parts of the California coast.
[Ken Rait speaking]
Originally, the intent was to dispose of these lands and to develop them for oil, gas, mining, and to use them for their range land resources. And only really in the 1970's did that all change. My name is Ken Rait, and I'm the Director of the U.S. Public Lands program at The Pew Charitable Trusts.
[Ann Morgan speaking]
The evolution is in response to the public's love of these resources. The more people that are recreating on public lands, that are hunting and fishing and camping, the more the BLM is going to pay attention to the people who are recreating on the public lands.
[Elena Daley speaking]
There are as many different opinions on what constitutes multiple use and sustained yield as there are people out there to tell you about them. And, so from a mining company's perspective it means one thing, for the person who wants to hike in the quiet and solitude it means something else. My name is Elena Daley, and I am currently retired from the Bureau of Land Management. The Bureau's attitude is much more one of a team working together. And if you're going to do a project, you bring in the wildlife biologist, the archaeologists, and the hydrologist, and make sure that you're looking at a piece of land for all it contains. Using it doesn't necessarily mean abusing it.
[Mark Squillace speaking]
My name is Mark Squillace. I'm professor of law at the University of Colorado law school. If I had to point to one particular thing that really changed the BLM, it was the establishment of the National Landscape Conservation system. This was a program that was put into place by then Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt. And it was really a remarkable idea.
[Bruce Babbitt speaking]
We decided it really was time to establish a conservation mission within the Bureau of Land Management.
[Mark Squillace speaking]
Some landscapes, it's going to make perfect sense to allow oil and gas development. Other landscapes may have some important recreational or wildlife resources, including things like endangered species or important cultural sites that should be protected.
[Ann Morgan speaking]
In America we are so blessed with our public lands. You don't have to be wealthy to go out and go camping, horseback riding, or hiking in some of the most beautiful places in the entire world. Where in other parts of the world that's all privately owned, you have to be a king or friend of the King in order to enjoy that. We're all royalty in United States because these lands are available to all of us, and it is an incredible world treasure.
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) oversees 246 million acres of the nation’s public land—from ecologically diverse southwestern deserts, to panoramic red rock country, to the sage-steppe, to Alaska’s boreal forest.
Originally, the intent was to develop these lands for oil, gas, and mining, as well as use them for their range land resources. In recent decades, however, there has been an evolution in response to public opinion. Hunters, fishermen, hikers, campers, and more outdoor enthusiasts all enjoy these public lands. As a result, the BLM is placing more emphasis on conservation.
More video and facts on the Pew Charitable Trusts’ America’s Western Lands project: http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/projects/americas-western-lands
TRANSCRIPT:
[John Stansfield speaking]
My wife Carolyn and I love to hike here in Beaver Creek on the wild south slope of pike's peak in central Colorado. My name is John Stansfield. I'm a writer and an outdoorsman. Across the West, there are many areas like Beaver Creek that have lots of wilderness quality. They are administered by the Bureau of Land Management.
[Ann Morgan speaking]
The Bureau of Land Management is an agency in the Department of the Interior. They manage 245 million acres of public lands, along with all of the resources to go along with that—the wildlife, the wilderness, the minerals. My name is Ann Morgan, and I'm a public lands consultant. It's everything from red rock deserts, to high mountain peaks, to old growth forests, to parts of the California coast.
[Ken Rait speaking]
Originally, the intent was to dispose of these lands and to develop them for oil, gas, mining, and to use them for their range land resources. And only really in the 1970's did that all change. My name is Ken Rait, and I'm the Director of the U.S. Public Lands program at The Pew Charitable Trusts.
[Ann Morgan speaking]
The evolution is in response to the public's love of these resources. The more people that are recreating on public lands, that are hunting and fishing and camping, the more the BLM is going to pay attention to the people who are recreating on the public lands.
[Elena Daley speaking]
There are as many different opinions on what constitutes multiple use and sustained yield as there are people out there to tell you about them. And, so from a mining company's perspective it means one thing, for the person who wants to hike in the quiet and solitude it means something else. My name is Elena Daley, and I am currently retired from the Bureau of Land Management. The Bureau's attitude is much more one of a team working together. And if you're going to do a project, you bring in the wildlife biologist, the archaeologists, and the hydrologist, and make sure that you're looking at a piece of land for all it contains. Using it doesn't necessarily mean abusing it.
[Mark Squillace speaking]
My name is Mark Squillace. I'm professor of law at the University of Colorado law school. If I had to point to one particular thing that really changed the BLM, it was the establishment of the National Landscape Conservation system. This was a program that was put into place by then Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt. And it was really a remarkable idea.
[Bruce Babbitt speaking]
We decided it really was time to establish a conservation mission within the Bureau of Land Management.
[Mark Squillace speaking]
Some landscapes, it's going to make perfect sense to allow oil and gas development. Other landscapes may have some important recreational or wildlife resources, including things like endangered species or important cultural sites that should be protected.
[Ann Morgan speaking]
In America we are so blessed with our public lands. You don't have to be wealthy to go out and go camping, horseback riding, or hiking in some of the most beautiful places in the entire world. Where in other parts of the world that's all privately owned, you have to be a king or friend of the King in order to enjoy that. We're all royalty in United States because these lands are available to all of us, and it is an incredible world treasure.
New Zealand's Department of Conservation (DOC) is a flagship BlueWorx customer with hundreds of remote field users across the country. BlueWorx was so easy to u...
New Zealand's Department of Conservation (DOC) is a flagship BlueWorx customer with hundreds of remote field users across the country. BlueWorx was so easy to use, it practically did the change management for them.
In this video we gather feedback from DOC people - Mike Edginton (CIO), Carl McGuinness (Director, Operations Planning), Mike Hopkins (Enterprise Resource Planning Team Lead), Ben Goggins (ERP Technical Support) and Shay Van Der Hurk (DOC Ranger). To understand why they chose to use BlueWorx and the impact the solution has had on the organisation and their people.
New Zealand's Department of Conservation (DOC) is a flagship BlueWorx customer with hundreds of remote field users across the country. BlueWorx was so easy to use, it practically did the change management for them.
In this video we gather feedback from DOC people - Mike Edginton (CIO), Carl McGuinness (Director, Operations Planning), Mike Hopkins (Enterprise Resource Planning Team Lead), Ben Goggins (ERP Technical Support) and Shay Van Der Hurk (DOC Ranger). To understand why they chose to use BlueWorx and the impact the solution has had on the organisation and their people.
Discover how the assistance of MDC's Private Lands Program helped transform a previously flooded soybean field into a haven for wildlife.
For more info: https...
Discover how the assistance of MDC's Private Lands Program helped transform a previously flooded soybean field into a haven for wildlife.
For more info: https://mdc.mo.gov/property/improve-my-property
Discover how the assistance of MDC's Private Lands Program helped transform a previously flooded soybean field into a haven for wildlife.
For more info: https://mdc.mo.gov/property/improve-my-property
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) oversees 246 million acres of the nation’s public land—from ecologically diverse southwestern deserts, to panoramic red...
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) oversees 246 million acres of the nation’s public land—from ecologically diverse southwestern deserts, to panoramic red rock country, to the sage-steppe, to Alaska’s boreal forest.
Originally, the intent was to develop these lands for oil, gas, and mining, as well as use them for their range land resources. In recent decades, however, there has been an evolution in response to public opinion. Hunters, fishermen, hikers, campers, and more outdoor enthusiasts all enjoy these public lands. As a result, the BLM is placing more emphasis on conservation.
More video and facts on the Pew Charitable Trusts’ America’s Western Lands project: http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/projects/americas-western-lands
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) oversees 246 million acres of the nation’s public land—from ecologically diverse southwestern deserts, to panoramic red rock country, to the sage-steppe, to Alaska’s boreal forest.
Originally, the intent was to develop these lands for oil, gas, and mining, as well as use them for their range land resources. In recent decades, however, there has been an evolution in response to public opinion. Hunters, fishermen, hikers, campers, and more outdoor enthusiasts all enjoy these public lands. As a result, the BLM is placing more emphasis on conservation.
More video and facts on the Pew Charitable Trusts’ America’s Western Lands project: http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/projects/americas-western-lands
Conservation of forest, forest conservation act, forest conservation act 1980, Forest (Conservation) Rules 2022, Forest Conservation Rules 2022, afforestation, accredited compensatory afforestation, accreditation of compensatory afforestation, compensatory afforestation accreditation, afforestation meaning, types of afforestation, Compensatory Afforestation Fund, National CAMPA Advisory Council (NCAC), Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act 2016
This video addresses:
"What are the three types of afforestation?"
"What are the government schemes for afforestation?"
“What type of land can be used for compensatory afforestation?”
What are the problems with compensatory afforestation?
Which ministry regulates the Campa Fund?
Which act is under Campa?
The Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act, 2016 (CAF Act)
Which act introduced compensatory afforestation?
What are 3 benefits of afforestation?
What are the profits of afforestation?
What is the difference between afforestation and afforestation?
Ever wondered about the green initiatives behind our forests? Dive into the world of accredited compensatory afforestation! Learn about the Forest Conservation Act, its rules, and how afforestation plays a crucial role in environmental conservation. Discover the types of afforestation, government schemes, and the Compensatory Afforestation Fund. This video covers it all, from the basics to the intricacies.
***
Link for Subscription and Membership https://www.enviroannotations.com/about-us#h.1cy5kkjx1p23
***
About Us:
Enviro Annotations (EA) is the answer to "Where can I find environmental news?" EA is dedicated to covering current environmental affairs. We aim to answer pressing questions such as: What is happening to the environment today? What are the current environmental issues? What are the general environmental challenges? What issues affect environmental ecology and biodiversity? And many more.
EA produces videos covering a wide range of topics related to environmental governance, including environmental policies, laws, and regulations in India; forest conservation and clearance; climate policy and action; environmental impact assessments (EIA), expert committee decisions like those by the Expert Appraisal Committee and State Environment Impact Assessment Authority (SEIAA); and the role of bodies like the National Green Tribunal (NGT). Key areas also include policy gap analysis, groundwater regulations (CGWA NOC), environmental compensation, and waste management rules, such as the Plastic Waste Management Rules and Hazardous Waste Management Rules. Additional content focuses on government notifications, office memorandums, corporate sustainability, and directives from regulatory bodies like CPCB and CAQM.
***
Contact us: [email protected]
WhatsApp Text 9312491427
***
#forest #forestconservation #ForestConservationRules2022 #afforestation #aca #CAMPA #environmentalnews #enviroannotations
Conservation of forest, forest conservation act, forest conservation act 1980, Forest (Conservation) Rules 2022, Forest Conservation Rules 2022, afforestation, accredited compensatory afforestation, accreditation of compensatory afforestation, compensatory afforestation accreditation, afforestation meaning, types of afforestation, Compensatory Afforestation Fund, National CAMPA Advisory Council (NCAC), Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act 2016
This video addresses:
"What are the three types of afforestation?"
"What are the government schemes for afforestation?"
“What type of land can be used for compensatory afforestation?”
What are the problems with compensatory afforestation?
Which ministry regulates the Campa Fund?
Which act is under Campa?
The Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act, 2016 (CAF Act)
Which act introduced compensatory afforestation?
What are 3 benefits of afforestation?
What are the profits of afforestation?
What is the difference between afforestation and afforestation?
Ever wondered about the green initiatives behind our forests? Dive into the world of accredited compensatory afforestation! Learn about the Forest Conservation Act, its rules, and how afforestation plays a crucial role in environmental conservation. Discover the types of afforestation, government schemes, and the Compensatory Afforestation Fund. This video covers it all, from the basics to the intricacies.
***
Link for Subscription and Membership https://www.enviroannotations.com/about-us#h.1cy5kkjx1p23
***
About Us:
Enviro Annotations (EA) is the answer to "Where can I find environmental news?" EA is dedicated to covering current environmental affairs. We aim to answer pressing questions such as: What is happening to the environment today? What are the current environmental issues? What are the general environmental challenges? What issues affect environmental ecology and biodiversity? And many more.
EA produces videos covering a wide range of topics related to environmental governance, including environmental policies, laws, and regulations in India; forest conservation and clearance; climate policy and action; environmental impact assessments (EIA), expert committee decisions like those by the Expert Appraisal Committee and State Environment Impact Assessment Authority (SEIAA); and the role of bodies like the National Green Tribunal (NGT). Key areas also include policy gap analysis, groundwater regulations (CGWA NOC), environmental compensation, and waste management rules, such as the Plastic Waste Management Rules and Hazardous Waste Management Rules. Additional content focuses on government notifications, office memorandums, corporate sustainability, and directives from regulatory bodies like CPCB and CAQM.
***
Contact us: [email protected]
WhatsApp Text 9312491427
***
#forest #forestconservation #ForestConservationRules2022 #afforestation #aca #CAMPA #environmentalnews #enviroannotations
Conservation Management Strategies (CMS) are a chance for New Zealanders to have their say on places and species they value. Department of Conservation (DOC) Programme Manager Kerry Swadling explains how DOC has produced maps with conservation priorities and now needs input from communities on what is important to them. For more visit http://www.doc.govt.nz/cms
This is an introduction to the Diploma of Conservation and Land Management delivered online by Tocal College. For more information go www.tocal.nsw.edu.au.
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) oversees 246 million acres of the nation’s public land—from ecologically diverse southwestern deserts, to panoramic red rock country, to the sage-steppe, to Alaska’s boreal forest.
Originally, the intent was to develop these lands for oil, gas, and mining, as well as use them for their range land resources. In recent decades, however, there has been an evolution in response to public opinion. Hunters, fishermen, hikers, campers, and more outdoor enthusiasts all enjoy these public lands. As a result, the BLM is placing more emphasis on conservation.
More video and facts on the Pew Charitable Trusts’ America’s Western Lands project: http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/projects/americas-western-lands
TRANSCRIPT:
[John Stansfield speaking]
My wife Carolyn and I love to hike here in Beaver Creek on the wild south slope of pike's peak in central Colorado. My name is John Stansfield. I'm a writer and an outdoorsman. Across the West, there are many areas like Beaver Creek that have lots of wilderness quality. They are administered by the Bureau of Land Management.
[Ann Morgan speaking]
The Bureau of Land Management is an agency in the Department of the Interior. They manage 245 million acres of public lands, along with all of the resources to go along with that—the wildlife, the wilderness, the minerals. My name is Ann Morgan, and I'm a public lands consultant. It's everything from red rock deserts, to high mountain peaks, to old growth forests, to parts of the California coast.
[Ken Rait speaking]
Originally, the intent was to dispose of these lands and to develop them for oil, gas, mining, and to use them for their range land resources. And only really in the 1970's did that all change. My name is Ken Rait, and I'm the Director of the U.S. Public Lands program at The Pew Charitable Trusts.
[Ann Morgan speaking]
The evolution is in response to the public's love of these resources. The more people that are recreating on public lands, that are hunting and fishing and camping, the more the BLM is going to pay attention to the people who are recreating on the public lands.
[Elena Daley speaking]
There are as many different opinions on what constitutes multiple use and sustained yield as there are people out there to tell you about them. And, so from a mining company's perspective it means one thing, for the person who wants to hike in the quiet and solitude it means something else. My name is Elena Daley, and I am currently retired from the Bureau of Land Management. The Bureau's attitude is much more one of a team working together. And if you're going to do a project, you bring in the wildlife biologist, the archaeologists, and the hydrologist, and make sure that you're looking at a piece of land for all it contains. Using it doesn't necessarily mean abusing it.
[Mark Squillace speaking]
My name is Mark Squillace. I'm professor of law at the University of Colorado law school. If I had to point to one particular thing that really changed the BLM, it was the establishment of the National Landscape Conservation system. This was a program that was put into place by then Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt. And it was really a remarkable idea.
[Bruce Babbitt speaking]
We decided it really was time to establish a conservation mission within the Bureau of Land Management.
[Mark Squillace speaking]
Some landscapes, it's going to make perfect sense to allow oil and gas development. Other landscapes may have some important recreational or wildlife resources, including things like endangered species or important cultural sites that should be protected.
[Ann Morgan speaking]
In America we are so blessed with our public lands. You don't have to be wealthy to go out and go camping, horseback riding, or hiking in some of the most beautiful places in the entire world. Where in other parts of the world that's all privately owned, you have to be a king or friend of the King in order to enjoy that. We're all royalty in United States because these lands are available to all of us, and it is an incredible world treasure.
New Zealand's Department of Conservation (DOC) is a flagship BlueWorx customer with hundreds of remote field users across the country. BlueWorx was so easy to use, it practically did the change management for them.
In this video we gather feedback from DOC people - Mike Edginton (CIO), Carl McGuinness (Director, Operations Planning), Mike Hopkins (Enterprise Resource Planning Team Lead), Ben Goggins (ERP Technical Support) and Shay Van Der Hurk (DOC Ranger). To understand why they chose to use BlueWorx and the impact the solution has had on the organisation and their people.
Discover how the assistance of MDC's Private Lands Program helped transform a previously flooded soybean field into a haven for wildlife.
For more info: https://mdc.mo.gov/property/improve-my-property
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) oversees 246 million acres of the nation’s public land—from ecologically diverse southwestern deserts, to panoramic red rock country, to the sage-steppe, to Alaska’s boreal forest.
Originally, the intent was to develop these lands for oil, gas, and mining, as well as use them for their range land resources. In recent decades, however, there has been an evolution in response to public opinion. Hunters, fishermen, hikers, campers, and more outdoor enthusiasts all enjoy these public lands. As a result, the BLM is placing more emphasis on conservation.
More video and facts on the Pew Charitable Trusts’ America’s Western Lands project: http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/projects/americas-western-lands
Conservation of forest, forest conservation act, forest conservation act 1980, Forest (Conservation) Rules 2022, Forest Conservation Rules 2022, afforestation, accredited compensatory afforestation, accreditation of compensatory afforestation, compensatory afforestation accreditation, afforestation meaning, types of afforestation, Compensatory Afforestation Fund, National CAMPA Advisory Council (NCAC), Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act 2016
This video addresses:
"What are the three types of afforestation?"
"What are the government schemes for afforestation?"
“What type of land can be used for compensatory afforestation?”
What are the problems with compensatory afforestation?
Which ministry regulates the Campa Fund?
Which act is under Campa?
The Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act, 2016 (CAF Act)
Which act introduced compensatory afforestation?
What are 3 benefits of afforestation?
What are the profits of afforestation?
What is the difference between afforestation and afforestation?
Ever wondered about the green initiatives behind our forests? Dive into the world of accredited compensatory afforestation! Learn about the Forest Conservation Act, its rules, and how afforestation plays a crucial role in environmental conservation. Discover the types of afforestation, government schemes, and the Compensatory Afforestation Fund. This video covers it all, from the basics to the intricacies.
***
Link for Subscription and Membership https://www.enviroannotations.com/about-us#h.1cy5kkjx1p23
***
About Us:
Enviro Annotations (EA) is the answer to "Where can I find environmental news?" EA is dedicated to covering current environmental affairs. We aim to answer pressing questions such as: What is happening to the environment today? What are the current environmental issues? What are the general environmental challenges? What issues affect environmental ecology and biodiversity? And many more.
EA produces videos covering a wide range of topics related to environmental governance, including environmental policies, laws, and regulations in India; forest conservation and clearance; climate policy and action; environmental impact assessments (EIA), expert committee decisions like those by the Expert Appraisal Committee and State Environment Impact Assessment Authority (SEIAA); and the role of bodies like the National Green Tribunal (NGT). Key areas also include policy gap analysis, groundwater regulations (CGWA NOC), environmental compensation, and waste management rules, such as the Plastic Waste Management Rules and Hazardous Waste Management Rules. Additional content focuses on government notifications, office memorandums, corporate sustainability, and directives from regulatory bodies like CPCB and CAQM.
***
Contact us: [email protected]
WhatsApp Text 9312491427
***
#forest #forestconservation #ForestConservationRules2022 #afforestation #aca #CAMPA #environmentalnews #enviroannotations