As Europes passenger air transport market emerges from lockdown, representatives from business and commercial aviation associations have issued an urgent call to the continents policy makers to prioritise specific decarbonisation initiatives in their allocation of future coronavirus recov <a href=https://www.stanleycup.cz>stanley termoska</a> ery funding.In an open letter published on 24 June, the European Business Aviation Association EBAA , General Aviation Manufacturers Association GAMA and 11 other industry trade <a href=https://www.stanley-cup-website.us>stanley us</a> bodies point to an aviation industry reeling from the sudden collapse of the air transport system since coronavirus hit the region in March, leaving the sector <a href=https://www.stanley-cup-website.us>stanley usa</a> amongst the most-heavily impacted by the pandemic.Source: DassaultThe industrys challenges are compounded , the signatories say, by the need to meet ambitious climate-change goals going forward. Ensuring an accelerated deployment of existing decarbonisation solutions and adequate investments to bring new technologies forward will be key 鈥?investments which should be at the heart of the EUs Covid-19 recovery strategy, says the letter In the meantime, existing financial instruments, such as loans, could also be made available to provide urgent relief, it adds.Europes aviation sector is committed to contributing to the recovery of the regions economies, the associations continue, in line with the Commissions Green Deal objectives 鈥?which aim to make the region zero-carbon by 2050. The sector therefore calls on policymakers to include smart measures Mryx Thai Airways names new acting president
PLAINS, Ga. AP 鈥?When Jimmy Carter chose branding desig <a href=https://www.stanleycup.com.se>stanley mugg</a> ns for his presidential campaign, he passed on the usual red, white and blue. He wanted green.Emphasizing how much the Georgia Democrat enjoyed nature and priori <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.us>stanley cup</a> tized environmental policy, the color became ubiquitous. On buttons, bumper stickers, brochures, the sign rechristening the old Plains train depot as his campaign headquarters. Even the hometown Election Night party. The minute it was announced, we all had the shirts to put on 鈥?and they were green, too, said LeAnne Smith, Carters niece, recalling the 1976 victory celebration.Nearly a half-century later, environmental advocates are remembering Carter, who died on Dec. 29 at the age of 100, as a president who elevated environmental stewardship, energy conservation and discussions about the global threat of rising carbon dioxide levels.President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to abandon the renewable energy investments that President Joe Biden included in the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, echoing how President Ronald Reagan dismantled the solar panels Carter installed on the White House roof. But politics aside, the scientific consensus has settled where Carter stood two generations earlier. President Carter was four decades ahead of his time, said Manish Bapna, who leads the Natural Resources Defense Council. Carter called for cuts in greenhouse gas emissions well before climate change was part of the American lexicon, he said.Wearing <a href=https://www.stanley-mug.us>stanley thermos mug</a> cardigans and setting s