Press
Press releases
493–504 of 727
Progress of environmental protection in agriculture too slow
The pace of environmental protection in the agriculture sector over the past 30 years has clearly been too slow. Many known problems such as high nitrogen inputs to soil and air remain unsolved despite improvements.
Car-sharing provider, computer centre, and Telekom nominated for Blue Angel Prize
The prize will be awarded this year to businesses which have demonstrated extraordinary commitment to protecting the environment and climate.
Microplastics in oceans – how much? From where?
UBA: Focus more attention on large-size plastic litter
Efficient space and water heaters
New EU regulations make heating units and water heaters more sustainable and provide guidelines for new purchases. The regulations specify a gradual establishment of limit values for energy efficiency and emissions and introduce energy labelling requirements.
State Secretary Flasbarth: Sustainable chemistry is more than just chemical safety
Young people declare war on marine litter
Support from the Federal Environment Agency
Car sharing could reduce CO2 emissions by six million tonnes
Whether it is car sharing or shared housing – lending, exchange or shared usage is in fashion.
More legal rulings on shipments of illegal waste in 2013
Significantly more court decisions taken on exports of waste to Africa and Eastern Europe
Environmental data shows that transport sector is not on course in environmental protection
The transport sector is the only sector which has failed to reduce its emissions since 1990
Chemicals Regulation REACH: companies must make improvements
More than half of the registration dossiers governed by the European REACH Regulation are not compliant with at least one of the seven screened data requirements, for example information on mutagenicity. These are the conclusions of a study carried out by the Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR) on behalf of the Federal Environment Agency (UBA).
Chemical brownfields: forest soil is very slow to forget
New interactive map shows old pollutant loads
Climate change could cause more heat-related deaths in future
Heat waves raise risk of death in heart patients by up to 15 percent