The document summarizes a trip to Hungary by a group of teachers as part of a Comenius experience. It describes how they felt welcomed from the moment they arrived, overcoming initial unease of not knowing each other. They learned about Hungarian culture, traditions, and folklore through dancing, archery, and celebrating St. Martin's Day. As teachers, they enjoyed observing and participating in music, craft, and English classes at the schools. The trip provided a peaceful and unforgettable learning experience for both their professional and personal development.
This document contains schedules of daily tasks for different days of the week. On Sunday, the scheduled tasks are for Mohd Syairiel, Mohd Zuhairi, Mohd Sufi, Mohd Syazani and Syarifah Najwa. The Monday schedule includes Haiffa Haffa Wattiey, Mohd Thaqif Farhan, Mohd Akmal Azmi, Ku Mohd Izham and Megat Azim Haikal. The Tuesday tasks are for Siti Nurulain Atikah, Aiman Haziq, Aidil Kusyakir, Putra Muhd Shahir and Mohd Faris. The Wednesday assignment is for Mohd Nazir,
This document discusses the need to shift from a "culture of fear" to a "culture of safety and sufficiency" in order to address issues like climate change and economic instability. It proposes focusing on local economies through the "Five P's" - Place, People, Products, Projects, and Payment systems. This approach aims to change the underlying narratives that fuel negative cultures based on scarcity, competition, and powerlessness. Local initiatives bringing people together around food, skills sharing, and celebration can help combine aspects of a "danger culture" focused on risk with a "peace culture" focused on community and positivity.
Market based incentives to drive circularityStephen Hinton
Ìý
This document provides an overview of market-based instruments for advancing the circular economy. It describes how the economy can be viewed as a set of bathtubs with money flowing between citizens, enterprises, government and municipalities. Various types of market incentives are discussed, including subsidies, taxes, fees and trading schemes. The document emphasizes that instruments work best when implemented holistically to address market failures and incentivize circular products and services while ensuring a just transition. Upstream levies on extraction and imports are recommended, and research is needed on indicators to measure the effects of these market-based approaches to circularity.
The economy as bathtub: a simple explanationStephen Hinton
Ìý
The document presents an analogy that conceptualizes the economy as a system of circulating money between citizens, enterprises, governments, local authorities, and banks. It describes how money is added to the system through bank loans for things like houses and cars. However, it notes that much debt has accumulated as people have borrowed more than they can repay. It then discusses potential ways to tackle unemployment, such as citizens spending more or implementing incentives for more hiring, but acknowledges there are many objections to consider regarding actual implementation.
Explaining resilience and how to measure it in your communityStephen Hinton
Ìý
After explaining the concept of the resilient municipality the deck walk through the steps to profiling the municipality on a common good matrix using capital and values as a framework
1) The document describes land degradation issues in several regions and initiatives to address them.
2) In Northwest Zimbabwe, overgrazing has led to soil erosion, inability to hold water, and increased drought and flooding. The African Centre for Holistic Management mimics grazing patterns to reverse degradation.
3) In Eastern Cape, South Africa, lowered water tables caused soil loss and food insecurity. The Living Lands initiative restored land through tree planting, river restoration, and sustainable practices.
(In Swedish) this slide pack explains how the ITK voluntary currency works - how it needs no clearing and how it can be used to drive projects where there are no resources available to get started.
Instead of seeing how we live as being a burden on the Earth, and the dire prospects of having to give up comfort, AVBP explores how tell the story of how to reverse the trend with a positive, feasible view of a sustainable future in a city?
The Story of the Humanitarian Water and Food AwardStephen Hinton
Ìý
Shows what we are all about - finding innovative, sustainable initiatives that are changing food insecurity to laying the foundation of peace and prosperity.
The Humanitarian Water and Food Award's view: if the business of your business is not resulting in food on the table and roof over the head then that business has no business doiing business
Sustainable Economic Growth with pollution feesStephen Hinton
Ìý
This presentation presents an overview of the Swedish Sustainable Economy Foundation's Flexible Fee Mechanism for creating a transition to the sustainable society while retaining economic stability.
The document introduces several members of the Selection Committee for the 2012 Humanitarian Water and Food Award. It provides brief biographies for each member, including their name, a quote, background and qualifications. The members are experts in fields like environmental security, peace and conflict resolution, engineering, water and sanitation, human rights, food security, and disaster relief.
Arno Rosemarin: Flexible fees workshops workshop sept 15 2011Stephen Hinton
Ìý
Can a flexible fee mechanism be applied to stave off shortages of phosphorous and secure food production in the next two decades? Input from Dr Rosemarin, with extensive experience in this area.
Självgående version av presentationen vid Cramo Instant's seminarier om Framtidsskolan och deras flyttbara lokaler för skolor, daghem, äldre vård mm. Argumentet är att satsning på Business as Usual är hasardspel givit energi-, klimat -och ekonomi situationen.
Flexible fees from a strategic sustainability perspectiveStephen Hinton
Ìý
This document discusses strategic sustainable development and flexible fees from The Natural Step framework. It proposes that flexible fees, when combined with robust sustainability principles, can help accelerate the transition to sustainability by providing both incentives and funding. However, further exploration is needed regarding assumptions, objectives beyond resource flows, and policy landscape improvements. The Natural Step framework takes a systems perspective and provides a unifying structure to guide strategic planning and indicator development from local to global scales.
(In Swedish) presented at the Nordic Council of Minister's workshop on sustainable consumption and production, it gives a bakground to the idea of charging progressively more for substances and activities that pollute.
The document discusses Nordic cooperation on sustainable consumption and production. It outlines focus areas for an SCP working group such as resource efficiency, environmentally driven markets, and cleaner technologies and innovations. Specific priorities are mentioned like policy instruments for eco-design, public procurement, and using procurement to promote cleantech and energy efficiency in construction.
Describes how governments can put flexible emission fees into place to rapidly transistion from the polluting society without harming the overall economy.
Presented first at the FUTURE PERFECT festival in Sweden, this slide deck give insight into the history and current status of the village being established in Sweden called Änggärdet (Eng Yairdet),
Eco village culture to and industrial economy city culture r1Stephen Hinton
Ìý
The document compares life in an industrial economy city to an eco-village. In an industrial economy city, people live in large buildings built by others far away using materials shipped in. Food comes from large, processed corporations. Interactions are limited and decisions are made by distant elites. In an eco-village, people build their own homes and community together from local materials. Food is produced and consumed locally and seasonally. Everyone knows each other and makes decisions collectively. Work follows natural rhythms rather than constant activity.
Explaining resilience and how to measure it in your communityStephen Hinton
Ìý
After explaining the concept of the resilient municipality the deck walk through the steps to profiling the municipality on a common good matrix using capital and values as a framework
1) The document describes land degradation issues in several regions and initiatives to address them.
2) In Northwest Zimbabwe, overgrazing has led to soil erosion, inability to hold water, and increased drought and flooding. The African Centre for Holistic Management mimics grazing patterns to reverse degradation.
3) In Eastern Cape, South Africa, lowered water tables caused soil loss and food insecurity. The Living Lands initiative restored land through tree planting, river restoration, and sustainable practices.
(In Swedish) this slide pack explains how the ITK voluntary currency works - how it needs no clearing and how it can be used to drive projects where there are no resources available to get started.
Instead of seeing how we live as being a burden on the Earth, and the dire prospects of having to give up comfort, AVBP explores how tell the story of how to reverse the trend with a positive, feasible view of a sustainable future in a city?
The Story of the Humanitarian Water and Food AwardStephen Hinton
Ìý
Shows what we are all about - finding innovative, sustainable initiatives that are changing food insecurity to laying the foundation of peace and prosperity.
The Humanitarian Water and Food Award's view: if the business of your business is not resulting in food on the table and roof over the head then that business has no business doiing business
Sustainable Economic Growth with pollution feesStephen Hinton
Ìý
This presentation presents an overview of the Swedish Sustainable Economy Foundation's Flexible Fee Mechanism for creating a transition to the sustainable society while retaining economic stability.
The document introduces several members of the Selection Committee for the 2012 Humanitarian Water and Food Award. It provides brief biographies for each member, including their name, a quote, background and qualifications. The members are experts in fields like environmental security, peace and conflict resolution, engineering, water and sanitation, human rights, food security, and disaster relief.
Arno Rosemarin: Flexible fees workshops workshop sept 15 2011Stephen Hinton
Ìý
Can a flexible fee mechanism be applied to stave off shortages of phosphorous and secure food production in the next two decades? Input from Dr Rosemarin, with extensive experience in this area.
Självgående version av presentationen vid Cramo Instant's seminarier om Framtidsskolan och deras flyttbara lokaler för skolor, daghem, äldre vård mm. Argumentet är att satsning på Business as Usual är hasardspel givit energi-, klimat -och ekonomi situationen.
Flexible fees from a strategic sustainability perspectiveStephen Hinton
Ìý
This document discusses strategic sustainable development and flexible fees from The Natural Step framework. It proposes that flexible fees, when combined with robust sustainability principles, can help accelerate the transition to sustainability by providing both incentives and funding. However, further exploration is needed regarding assumptions, objectives beyond resource flows, and policy landscape improvements. The Natural Step framework takes a systems perspective and provides a unifying structure to guide strategic planning and indicator development from local to global scales.
(In Swedish) presented at the Nordic Council of Minister's workshop on sustainable consumption and production, it gives a bakground to the idea of charging progressively more for substances and activities that pollute.
The document discusses Nordic cooperation on sustainable consumption and production. It outlines focus areas for an SCP working group such as resource efficiency, environmentally driven markets, and cleaner technologies and innovations. Specific priorities are mentioned like policy instruments for eco-design, public procurement, and using procurement to promote cleantech and energy efficiency in construction.
Describes how governments can put flexible emission fees into place to rapidly transistion from the polluting society without harming the overall economy.
Presented first at the FUTURE PERFECT festival in Sweden, this slide deck give insight into the history and current status of the village being established in Sweden called Änggärdet (Eng Yairdet),
Eco village culture to and industrial economy city culture r1Stephen Hinton
Ìý
The document compares life in an industrial economy city to an eco-village. In an industrial economy city, people live in large buildings built by others far away using materials shipped in. Food comes from large, processed corporations. Interactions are limited and decisions are made by distant elites. In an eco-village, people build their own homes and community together from local materials. Food is produced and consumed locally and seasonally. Everyone knows each other and makes decisions collectively. Work follows natural rhythms rather than constant activity.
Lev som en låginkomst svensk - lev klimaträttvist
1. Sveriges koldioxidutsläpp från fossil bränsle
Bränsle som säljs i landet
konsumtion
Per år
Siffror från energimyndigheten
TWh
TRANSPORT INDUSTRI BOSTÄDER UTRIKES TOTALT
Olja
83
15
15
31
144
Gas
0,4
4
2
6,4
Kol
16
16
Miljon Ton CO2
Per person
20,45
2,27
9,43
1,05
4,05
0,45
7,61
0,85
41,55
4,62
Kalkyl baserat på standard värden, Stephen Hinton Consulting
Men, det kommer klimatgaser från andra källor också
Klimatgaser:
Genomsnitt utsläpp
per person*
Siffror: natirvårdsverket
MEN MEN alla svenskar är inte lika….
Skulle alla leva som en
svensk med lägsta
inkomst skulle vi behöva
EN PLANET
ANTECKNINGAR
* Vi har inte dragit ifrån motsvarande utsläpp för klimatgaser
som Sverige exporterar
Siffror från SCB
Provokativ miljömatte från http://stephenhinton.org