OECD Observer
Topics » Environment & resources » Other
  • Struggling with green goals

    Ensuring Environmental Compliance: Trends and Good Practices

    Despite their progress in developing greenlaws and policies, OECD countries are noton track to achieve some of their key environmental goals and commitments.

    (282 words)
  • Bio-people

    Improving the diversity of biological habitats and ecosystems is a vital goal in itself, yet policies to encourage biodiversity, like most legislation, will have both supporters and naysayers. Limitations on land use to protect biodiversity can sometimes reduce income, but have broad benefits for the general public.

    (238 words)
  • Angela Merkel

    ©Reuters/Fabrizio Bensch

    First International Transport Forum

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel will address the first International Transport Forum on climate change and transport at Leipzig on 28-30 May.

    (29 words)
  • Making city sense

    Cities are economic drivers at the heart of globalisation. Policymakers should look more closely at their potential, too. Here is why.

    (1996 words)
  • Back on track

    How do you manage transport in a rapidly growing country of over 1 billion people? Developing the railways may be the simple answer. Increasing demands are being placed on China’s transport infrastructure, and the OECD’s Railway Reform in China suggests that the development of an efficient, innovative and market-oriented rail network would facilitate investment and modernisation, alleviate the growing income gap and spread the benefits of economic reform more widely.

    (380 words)
  • Sustainable buildings

    Le Corbusier, the great (though controversial) European urban planner and architect, argued that buildings were machines, to perform a task and to be disposed of when no longer up-to-date. He once famously quipped: why should we leave our buildings to our heirs, since we do not bequeath them our bodies?

    (1366 words)
  • Rough trade in diamonds

    Diamonds may enjoy a romantic image as a girl’s best friend, but the precious stones also play a far less appealing role in helping to finance some of the world’s bloodiest conflicts. The trade in illicit rough diamonds funds and prolongs conflicts in Angola, Sierra Leone, Liberia and the Democratic Republic of Congo, and is also being accused of funding international terrorism. Recent reports suggest that Al Qaeda terrorists have raised money through the purchase and sale of illicit diamonds.

    (859 words)
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