Showing results for content tagged 'telecoupling'. Search instead for the keyword 'telecoupling'.
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Telecoupling
Telecoupling. Understanding how small and connected the world is. New methods, new paths to sustainability
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Scientists advocate breaking laws – of geography and ecology
Published on February 2, 2021
All that’s local is a lot more global, and scientists say solutions can only be found through broader views and collaborations nearby and far away. -
Well-off countries need trade to cut environmental woes
Published on July 13, 2020
A first analysis of its kind shows a common problem between haves and have-nots. Trading internationally was generally good for developed countries but resulted in environmental losses for developing countries. -
Telecoupling pulls pieces of sustainability puzzle together
Published on June 21, 2013
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New science redefines remote - even pandas global
Published on September 30, 2015
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Transformative change can save humans and nature
Published on December 12, 2019
International sustainability experts, including MSU's Jianguo "Jack" Liu, outline what's needed how the human/nature balance must change. -
Today’s global farming less back breaking, more mind bending
Published on June 22, 2018
Farming has always been difficult. However, through technological advances, we can plant crops, apply precise synthetic fertilizers and harvest with ease. Yet even as uncertainty over supply has been reduced, market demand is more volatile than ever. -
Diving deep into water and energy trade-offs
Published on April 30, 2019
Two papers by Michigan State University (MSU) scientists begin challenging a more simplistic, input/output view of natural resources in favor of a way that better reflected how the world really works. -
Tariffs lead to creative supply chains
Published on August 5, 2019
MSU scholars apply a new, more holistic way to examine global agricultural trade to better understand what’s going on when a country as enormous as China develops a big appetite for soybeans. -
Importing food damages domestic environment
Published on May 7, 2018
The decisions domestic farmers must make as imported food changes the crop market can damage the environment.