environment

Innovation ministry, Energy Community to set up centre promoting green transition in W Balkans

Daily News Hungary

A knowledge centre supporting green economic solutions in the Western Balkans will be set up in Budapest, according to a cooperation agreement signed by the Hungarian innovation and technology ministry and Energy Community, an organisation promoting energy cooperation between the European Union and its neighbours.

Attila Steiner, the state secretary responsible for energy and climate policy, told a press conference on Monday that besides promoting the transition to circular economy, the centre will work to integrate Hungarian expertise and innovations into energy-related initiatives in the Western Balkans. The cooperation will speed up the region’s EU integration, he said.

The centre will hold trainings and workshops while drawing on knowledge and best practices accumulated in Hungary, Steiner said, citing the implementation of Hungary’s Sustainable Support System (METAR) as an example.

The European Commission’s investment plan for the next seven years has allocated some 9 billion euros for the energy development of the region, mostly for investments in sustainable energy, waste management and wastewater management, Steiner said.

Hungary sees the project as an opportunity to promote Hungarian investments in the region and to make local economy greener, he said.

Janez Kopac, the director of the Energy Community, said Western Balkan countries were at different stages of integrating the EU’s climate objectives. The centre will develop concrete programmes to help them, he said.

Olivér Várhelyi, the EU commissioner for neighbourhood and enlargement, greeted the initiative in a video message, saying the knowledge centre was closely connected to the European Commission’s investment and economic plans in the region.

Small Balaton, Hungary, Lake Balaton, nature
Read alsoHungary 9th in EU in emissions reduction

Hungary 9th in EU in emissions reduction

Small Balaton, Hungary, Lake Balaton, nature

Hungary’s greenhouse emissions three years ago were a third lower than in the early 1990s, according to an environmental think tank.

The country is 9th on the European Union’s list of emissions reducers, Máté Litkei, the head of the Climate Policy Institute, said in an interview published by daily Magyar Nemzet on Friday.

“We have also agreed to set a target to reduce emissions by 55 percent by 2030 and make energy production 90 percent carbon-free,”

he said. Making the whole economy carbon-free by 2050 “will require large resources, but this is not impossible to achieve,” he added.

Litkei said all EU member states were handling climate targets as a priority issue but the distribution of targets was a matter of debate. Countries that achieved less than the European average in the past must now make greater efforts than others, he said.

The economic slowdown caused by Covid-19 significantly reduced greenhouse emissions, but a recent forecast by the International Energy Agency showed that this year’s relaunch and the global economic race is expected to result in “larger extra carbon dioxide emissions than what was, so to speak, saved during last year’s lockdown”, he said.

EC refers Hungary to EU court over urban waste water treatment

water pollution

The European Commission said on Wednesday that it has referred Hungary to the EU’s Luxembourg court over its failure to comply with the common directive on urban waste water treatment.

Under the directive, EU member states must ensure that urban agglomerations — cities, towns an settlements — properly collect and treat their waste waters with the aim to eliminate or mitigate their undesirable effects.

In a statement, the EC noted the common European Green Deal legislation which sets a zero pollution goal for every member state.

“Full implementation of the standards enshrined in EU legislation is important to effectively protect human health and safeguard the natural environment,” the commission said.

It noted that 22 agglomerations in Hungary have not fully complied with the requirements set in the directive as they have so far failed to provide all their residents with a system for collecting urban waste water or an alternative ensuring the same level of environmental protection. In addition, Hungary has failed to provide more stringent cleaning treatment for five other agglomerations, it said.

As they are not properly collected, the waste waters cannot be treated as required by EU law, the commission said.

It noted a letter of formal notice sent to Hungarian authorities in February 2017 which was followed by a reasoned opinion sent ten months later.

“Although the Hungarian authorities have closely cooperated with the Commission, the low ratio of connections to collecting systems already built and the high ratio of individual or appropriate systems (IAS) usage led the Commission to conclude that the authorities have failed to prove compliance for the above-mentioned agglomerations,” the EC said.

tisza-river-plastic-waste-hungary
Read alsoWater management authority alerted of Szamos River pollution from Romania

Hungary has achieved great success in environmental protection goals

Tisza River Pollution Environment Waste Garbage Effort

The government treats the protection of the natural environment as a priority and Hungary has been able to make significant progress in achieving its environmental goals, Minister of Agriculture István Nagy said in a statement on the occasion of World Environment Day on Saturday.

Environmental protection measures introduced by the government in recent years have helped improve air quality, repair environmental damage, tackle the problem of the polytunnel plastic waste, clean up waste in state-owned forests and have supported environmental education, the minister said.

Nagy said the government will spend 280 million forints (EUR 808,000) to build a system for collecting the 10,000 tonnes of polytunnel plastic waste generated annually by farmers, adding that

plans include setting up plants across the country to recycle the waste using a Hungarian patent to make plastic crates, buckets, seedling trays and other products.

Hungary bans some single-use plastics from July 1

Orbán: Biggest polluters should bear costs of climate action

In the “Let’s clean up the country” project, state-owned forestries collected 6,000 cubic metres of communal waste from forests in recent months, the minister said. Meanwhile, national park directorates collected a total of 5,258 cubic metres of waste along popular tourist paths and in nature conservation areas last year, he added.

The project was announced in July last year as part of the Climate and Nature Protection Action Plan, with the aim to eliminate illegal rubbish dumps, state secretary of the Innovation and Technology Ministry Tamás Schanda said on his Facebook page.

Schanda said the smartphone application the public can use to report illegal dumps has been downloaded by almost 17,000 people and the number of reports received has already reached 17,000.

Between July 2020 and May 2021, more than 27,000 tonnes of waste was cleared as part of the project, he added.

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Read also5 of the most beautiful Hungarian lakes you might have never heard about – PHOTOS, VIDEOS

Hungary bans some single-use plastics from July 1

plastic, waste, europe, landfill
Hungary is banning a number of single-use plastics from July 1, state secretary for developing the circular economy Attila Steiner said on Wednesday. The ban will apply to plastic cotton swabs, eating utensils, plates, straws and drink mixers as well as expanded polystyrene foam food containers and cups, Steiner said.

Hungary’s government is committed to climate protection and has made a priority goal of switching over to the circular economy as quickly as possible, he added.

Differentiated rules will be introduced for plastic bags: light plastic shopping bags generally sold at check-outs as well as plastic bags with a thickness of 15 microns or more will be banned, with the exception of ones made with biodegradable plastic.
To discourage use of bags made with conventional plastic, their product fee will be raised from 57 forints (EUR 0.16)
to 1,900 forints per kilogramme, or around 5 forints per bag.
The ban on plastic cups and covers will come into force in 2023, allowing time to switch over to alternatives.
The ban will not apply to inventories in place before July 1.
Steiner noted that the government had made 10 billion forints in subsidies available to companies that make products affected by the ban to make the change to other technologies.

Polish PM says Czechs agree to withdraw lawsuit about Turow mine

Morawiecki

The Czech Republic has agreed to withdraw a lawsuit it filed at the European Union’s top court to halt operations at a lignite coal mine in Poland, the Polish prime minister said early on Tuesday.

On Friday, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ordered Poland to immediately stop mining at the Turow mine operated by state-run PGE, pending a final decision in the case.

The Czech government had argued that a planned expansion of the open-pit mine was environmentally damaging for communities on its side of the border, and that Warsaw had violated EU law by extending mining at Turow until 2026.

But Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said the two governments were now on the cusp of an agreement to de-escalate the dispute.

“Given the tightening of cross-border cooperation with the Czech Republic, it seems that we are already very close to an agreement,” Morawiecki said in comments posted on Twitter after an EU summit in Brussels.

“As a result of this agreement, the Czech Republic agreed to withdraw its lawsuit to the CJEU.”

Enviromental groups and Czechs living close to the border had complained about the mine, saying the drinking water supply has been affected and they have suffered from noise and dust as well as subsidence.

“We agreed to set up an expert committee to investigate the environmental issues related to the open pit,” Morawiecki said, adding that PGE would invest to lessen the outflow of water from the mine.

Morawiecki
Read alsoPolish PM says Czechs agree to withdraw lawsuit about Turow mine

Orbán: Biggest polluters should bear costs of climate action

orbán brussels

The costs of the fight against climate change should be borne by the world’s biggest polluting companies, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said in Brussels on Monday ahead of a two-day summit of European Union leaders.

Hungary does not accept the position that individuals and families should bear the costs of climate action, the prime minister said in a video posted on Facebook. Orbán added that in such a case the fight against climate change could cost an average Hungarian family up to 20,000 forints (EUR 57) a month.

“We cannot accept this,” Orbán said. “We support the solution that would have polluters bear the costs of climate protection.”

“We’re at the beginning of the battle,” he said, adding that he hoped Hungary would be successful in enforcing its interests.

The prime minister noted that the main topics to be covered at the summit include the pandemic, migration and environmental and climate protection.

When it comes to the pandemic, “Hungary is usually being congratulated”, he said, noting that the country had one of the highest vaccination rates in the bloc.

Orbán is being accompanied to Brussels by Innovation and Technology Minister László Palkovics.

Budapest
Read also2020 was Europe’s hottest year on record

Volcano erupts in Africa – 13 killed fleeing, but much more deaths are estimated

Lava Eruption Nature Volcano

A smoking trail of lava from a volcanic eruption covered hundreds of houses in eastern Congo on Sunday, leaving residents to pick gingerly through the wreckage for belongings and loved ones, though the flow halted just short of the city of Goma.

Goma was thrown into panic on Saturday evening as Mount Nyiragongo, one of the world’s most active and dangerous volcanoes, erupted, turning the night sky an eerie red and sending a wall of orange lava downhill towards the lakeside city of about 2 million people.

Army spokesman Guillaume Njike said 13 were killed fleeing the disaster, including nine in a traffic accident and four who tried to escape Munzenze prison in Goma.

That figure will likely rise considerably. A Reuters reporter saw two people killed by the initial eruption in a village north of Goma, and witnesses spoke of dead and missing relatives.

Haunted by memories of an eruption in 2002 that killed 250 people and left 120,000 homeless, residents fled on foot with their belongings, some towards the nearby border with Rwanda.

The International Federation of Red Cross said that between 3,000 and 5,000 fled into Rwanda on Saturday, many of them peasants and farmers with livestock. Some began returning on Sunday.

The eruption was caused when fractures opened in the volcano’s side, causing lava flows in various directions.

As the sun rose on Sunday a smouldering black gash about half a mile wide could be seen on the outskirts of Goma, where the lava had cooled to rubble.

At some points it was three storeys high, engulfing even large buildings and sending smoke into the grey morning sky.

Residents in the Buhene district sorted through the mangled white remains of tin roofs or lifted rocks – tiny individual efforts in what will likely be a months-long campaign to restore the zone.

Elsewhere, groups of people posed for photos on the steaming lava.

Some said they had lost family members.

Ernestine Kabuo, 68, said she had tried to carry her sick husband from their house as the lava approached, but he was too unwell to leave.

“I said to myself, I can’t go alone, we’ve been married for the best and for the worst,” said Kabuo, walking in a daze and crying, surrounded by buildings swallowed by lava.

“I went back to at least try to get him out but couldn’t. I ran away and he got burned inside. I don’t know what to do. I curse this day.”

The flow towards Goma stopped a few hundred meters from the city limits. The nearby airport was untouched. A separate lava flow that headed east over unpopulated terrain towards Rwanda also appeared to have stopped.

“Local authorities who have been monitoring the eruption overnight report that the lava flow has lost intensity,” government spokesman Patrick Muyaya said on Twitter on Sunday.

Still, authorities warned that the danger was not over and that seismic activity in the area could cause further lava flows.

Lava crossed a main road out of Goma overnight, cutting it off from cities to the north. Traffic was in gridlock in most places as people tried to leave or return to assess the damage to their homes.

Experts were worried that the volcanic activity observed in the past five years at Nyiragongo mirrors that in the years preceding eruptions in 1977 and 2002.

Volcanologists at the OVG, which monitors Nyiragongo, have struggled to make basic checks on a regular basis since the World Bank cut funding amid embezzlement allegations.

From October 2020 to April, the observatory could not carry out comprehensive seismic checks on the volcano because analysts lacked an internet connection, OVG’s scientific director Celestin Kasereka Mahinda told local Radio Okapi on Sunday.

Internet was restored in April thanks to funding from a U.S. partner, he said, but by that stage too much time had been lost.

“As soon as the internet was restored, we had started recording the warning signals, but since we did not have previous data, we thought it was the start of volcanic activity. Hence this surprise.”

Ultramarathon runners die China
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Hungarian ministry and opposition party call to defend the environment

Tisza River Pollution Environment Waste Garbage Effort

Marking the Day of Hungarian Nature on Saturday, the parliamentary group leader of the junior ruling Christian Democrats stressed the importance of paying mindful heed to the environment and teaching children to do the same.

“The resources of the world around us — drinking water, farmland, raw materials — so often are taken for granted,” István Simicskó said.

“Our children can only enjoy these priceless treasures in the future if we treat nature as good custodians.”

“We must behave as human beings, not as consumers,” he added in a statement.

Meanwhile, on the occasion of International Day for Biological Diversity, Máté Kanász-Nagy, co-leader of green opposition LMP party, said the creation of a livable environment and the preservation of wildlife were equal to the very future of civilisation.

At a press conference broadcast on Facebook on Saturday, Kanász-Nagy said the cause of the extinction of species was the overuse of nature, deforestation for economic purposes, and environmental pollution.

He pledged that LMP, as part of new government after the 2022 general election, would put a halt to construction projects that threaten wildlife habitats and the destruction of green spaces and waterfronts.

He added that LMP supports organic farming instead of large-scale agriculture.

The Ministry of Agriculture said in a statement on International Day for Biological Diversity that Hungary’s natural environment and biodiversity were “outstanding” in European comparison.

“Protecting the diversity of wildlife is a joint undertaking and responsibility,” the statement said, adding that Hungary’s new national biodiversity strategy for the next decade is in the course of being drafted.

The ministry said it was “committed to conserving biodiversity” and active protection measures have resulted the rebuilding of more than 100,000 hectares of wildlife habitat in recent years, helping to protect a number of endangered species.

Tisza River Pollution Environment Waste Garbage
Read alsoShocking documentary on the unimaginable pollution of Hungary’s second-largest river – VIDEO

Cause for concern? – Nuclear waste stored in plastic bags in Hungary

atomic energy paks radioactive

Authorities are currently working on establishing safer conditions for the storage of the material which dates from the 1960s and ’70s.

As atlatszo.hu writes, it was in 1957-58 that the first “isotope cemetery” was built in Solymár, just outside of Budapest. Its construction carried out in total secrecy, it was meant to store radioactive waste that originated from the experimental reactor of Csillebérc, which is still in use today for research purposes. The storage site in Solymár was rather simple in its structure: it consisted of sealed steel or concrete tubes (sources differ) lowered into the ground, which held the radioactive material.

nuklearis hulladek nuclear waste storage casks
Casks containing nuclear waste in Püspökszilágy. Source: RHK

In the 1970s, another storage facility was established in Hungary, just outside of Püspökszilágy, a village situated about 50 kilometres away from Budapest. It was designed to contain low- and intermediate-level radioactive waste coming from anywhere but reactors. That includes, for example, various processes within the domains of agriculture and medicine, as well as research and education. Towards the end of 1976, the containers in Solymár were dismantled due to their small capacity and rudimentary technology. Their contents were transferred to the much larger site in Püspökszilágy, a part of them simply loaded into plastic sacks. This is the very same radioactive material whose presence led to a number of terrifying rumours,

such as high levels of background radiation and isotopes seeping into the groundwater,

which atlatszo.hu and Energiaklub set out to investigate in 2019.

Here is what they found: as even RHK, the company responsible for nuclear waste disposal in Hungary, acknowledged, some of the waste contained isotopes with a longer half-life which, according to the current safety regulations, should have only been stored there temporarily, if at all. The plastic sacks also proved dangerous: there was a report of one incident when workers attempted to move a plastic sack filled with radioactive dust from one metal barrel to another: the sack ripped open, its contents spilling onto the ground. All three employees present who attempted to clean up the dust suffered a high dose (284/101/54 mSv) of radiation. For comparison, the average person is subjected to a yearly dose of 3 mSv. Finally, they found proof that levels of isotopes tritium (3H) and radiocarbon (14C) had been increasing in the groundwater, according to measurements taken on site.

nuklearis hulladek nuclear waste storage
Modern nuclear waste containers in Bátaapáti. Source: RHK

While RHK stated that they were aware that locals could come into contact with the radioactive material when building roads or houses, both their board of directors and outside experts attempted to quell locals’ worries about the storage facility. RHK has initiated a “security-increasing program” which includes sorting, compacting, and repackaging nuclear waste in order to decrease its hazard level. As atlatszo.hu reports, they have also decided to transfer some of the repackaged waste to the newer and more secure storage facility in Bátaapáti, which is where the low-and intermediate-level waste of nuclear reactors is kept. This transport process is expected to begin this year; however,

it could take 15-20 years to repackage all the nuclear waste which may not be stored correctly due to the long time that has passed since it was deposited.

As for the groundwater, scientists pointed out that both tritium and radiocarbon are naturally occurring isotopes, posing no health risks at the levels currently measured. Nevertheless, Orsolya Fülöp, an expert on the topic and member of Energiaklub, warned that there was no telling how tritium levels could change in those 15 to 20 years.

The plastic bags of nuclear waste in Püspökszilágy are not the only problem: as hvg.hu highlighted, there is currently no long-term storage facility for high-activity nuclear waste, such as spent fuel rods, anywhere in Europe. There are plans for constructing one in Hungary; they are currently searching for the most appropriate location. The structure is planned to be built between 2030 and 2064, just in time for the decommissioning of the power plant in Paks.

Paks nuclear plant
Read alsoLMP calls for cancelling Paks nuclear power station expansion contract

National Geographic’s favourite amateur Hungarian photographer – VIDEO

Magyarország madártávlatból

Apart from the fact that his photos were chosen as the Nat Geo Photo of the Day on eleven occasions, one of his films on Hungary were included in the channel’s series called Europe from above.

This is not the first time that our dear readers can come across the name of András Kószó. We recently wrote about the Hungarian artist who makes flags for Hollywood productions. András considers this his primary job as he designed and made flags for famous American movies that were shot in Hungary. As he says, he had the luck to personally attend shootings which motivated him to continue photography and make films and take it to the next level to reach a higher standard.

He made it to such a high standard and level that apart from it becoming part of his life, it may be transforming into a real profession.

András says he is filled with joy and is very proud that

an English production company that also produces the films of National Geographic reached out to him and asked for permission to present one of his films about Hungary

included in the channel’s series Europe from above.

Mesmerising film of National Geographic about Hungary

It is a tremendous achievement for the whole country that

several other foreign TV channels also reached out to him with a similar goal, to present his films on their own channels.

András told szeretlekmagyarország.hu how nature stole his heart, how he started to take photos on an amateur basis, and how he got connected to one of the most famous magazines.

“Ever since a kid, I was fascinated by visual representation, especially all the beauty of nature seen from above: landscapes and special places all made a huge impression on me, already at a young age. My father, being a pilot, took me several times to fly with him; I had the chance to see the world from above from a bird’s-eye view.”

He was delighted when drones equipped with a camera were finally available in Hungary as well. He says he was one of the firsts to acquire such a device, and it has been his favourite for photography ever since.

“I feel like I made the right decision as

11 of my photos have been chosen so far as National Geographic’s photo of the day. Moreover, I also won Photo of the Month, which was published in the magazine.”

Kószó András
Facebook – Kószó András
Kószó András
Facebook – Kószó András
Kószó András
Facebook – Kószó András

For more mesmerising photos, check out his Instagram page. 

Beyond photography, making films also became a favourite for him. This technique allowed him to capture the most beautiful landscapes, buildings and natural phenomena in the wonderful country of Hungary. He particularly enjoys presenting the least known places hidden from the big audience. Every time he has the chance to travel abroad, he always has his camera with rim, ready to capture all local beauties later to present them in the form of a mesmerizing film.

milan radisics vimeo
Read alsoHungarian short film wins numerous international awards – VIDEO

Earth Day – Budapest mayor calls for ‘green shift’, greater focus on welfare

Hungary needs to make a “turnaround” and focus its attention on environmental issues and efforts to “ensure opportunities for a decent life”, Budapest Mayor Gergely Karácsony said on Thursday, marking Earth Day, adding that those efforts should come “before the interests of the financial markets”.

In a video published on Facebook, Karácsony quoted Pope Francis as saying that climate change and the destruction of the environment cannot be effectively combatted unless efforts are made to eliminate poverty and to resolve welfare problems.

“Damaging the environment and the planet as well as conserving huge inequalities between people are not separate sins but different consequences of a single sin,” the mayor said.

Karácsony said he believed in a “novel normalcy, a different state of affairs” after the pandemic and called for more sustainable and more humane policies both in Hungary and globally. In light of the pandemic, systemic changes can no longer be postponed, he said.

Opposition LMP said it was similarly ready to make a “green shift” if it won next year’s election.

Erzsébet Schmuck, the party’s co-leader, told an online press conference that “there is no reason to celebrate” Earth Day in light of an increasing climate crisis caused by human activity. She noted that average temperatures were rising in Hungary, average annual rainfall was decreasing drastically and unexpected floods were becoming more frequent.

All this could compromise the country’s food production and summertime heat waves could claim lives, she added.

Schmuck accused the government of “failing to build a crisis-proof, environmentally friendly” economy, and insisted that the government’s ideal was an agriculture of large farms using chemical technologies. The government should also seek ways to ensure sustainable water management and improve air quality in the country, she added.

Budapest
Read also2020 was Europe’s hottest year on record

2020 was Europe’s hottest year on record

Budapest

Europe experienced its hottest year on record last year, while the Arctic suffered a summer of extreme wildfires partly due to low snow cover as climate change impacts intensified, the European Union’s observation service said on Thursday.

As world leaders prepared to brandish their plans to fight climate change at a U.S.-led summit on Thursday, EU scientists issued a stark reminder that the impacts of a warmer world are already here.

Europe’s average annual temperature in 2020 was the highest on record and at least 0.4 degrees Celsius above the next five warmest years — all of which took place in the last decade, the Copernicus Earth observation service said.

“Temperatures are increasing in all seasons in Europe,” said Freja Vamborg, senior scientist at Copernicus.

It was the hottest winter on record, at 3.4 degrees Celsius above the average European winter temperature seen during 1981-2020. Weather is more variable in winter, so extreme temperatures tend to play out most starkly in that season.

It was also Europe’s warmest autumn, while summer heatwaves were not as intense or prolonged as in recent years, despite pockets of record-breaking heat in places including Scandinavia and France.

Meanwhile, the Arctic saw a “spectacular year”, Vamborg said, pointing to a summer of record-breaking wildfires in Arctic Siberia, which were exacerbated by high temperatures and lower-than-average snow cover.

The average temperature in Arctic Siberia last year broke records by a large margin at 4.3 degrees Celsius above the 1981-2020 average.

Globally, Copernicus Earth said 2020 was one of the world’s three hottest years on record, confirming findings released this week by the World Meteorological Organization.

The EU on Wednesday set a target to slash emissions faster this decade, and the United States is expected to do the same on Thursday, hiking the pressure on countries including China and India. [mL1N2M81NI]

Currently, countries’ combined pledges fall far short of the rapid emissions cuts scientists say are needed to limit warming to 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels and stave off the most severe impacts of climate change.

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Read also2019 hottest year in Hungary since 1901, says weather service!

Wizz Air wins Greenairport airline partner of the year award

wizz air summer

During an online award ceremony held on Tuesday, Budapest Airport honored airport partners who made outstanding contributions to the sustainability of the airport and of aviation over the past year, despite the negative impacts of the global pandemic on aviation. It is now more than 5 years since the airport operator launched the Greenairport program, where it works together with more than forty partner companies and organizations, for sustainable operation.

Budapest Airport held its sixteenth Greenairport partner meeting – this time, online – where it recognized the outstanding environmental efforts of its airport partners, in three categories.

The Greenairport airline partner of the year award went to Wizz Air.

The company is making steady progress towards becoming the greenest airline in Europe, which is facilitated primarily by its young aircraft fleet and the introduction of new, fuel-efficient procedures.

With the modification of its landing and takeoff techniques, the carrier was able to reduce its carbon dioxide emissions by an estimated 500 tons a year at Budapest Airport alone. Since November 2020, Wizz Air’s passengers are also able to contribute to making aviation more sustainable; they can offset the harmful emissions of their flights in the airline’s compensation program. This year, the company is launching a pilot project to improve the handling of on-board waste, which Budapest Airport is happy to support.

greenairport program
Photo: www.facebook.com/BudapestAirport

In the landside services category, Budapest Airport’s contracted taxi company, Főtaxi collected the Greenairport award. As part of its “Greenway” program, the company expanded its fleet of electric vehicles, installed rapid chargers and introduced paperless payment for passengers in 2020. It is also continuing its tree-planting scheme, whereby every year it plants as many trees as it has taxis operating in Budapest.

This year’s Greenairport award was presented in the tenant category to HungaroControl, for working out plans for carbon neutral events. Although face-to-face meetings are currently not possible, the company already put its detailed sustainability plans into practice before the pandemic, during its annual partner meeting. HungaroControl calculated all environmental burdens in connection with the event, from guest travel to the production of the food served. It then reduced carbon dioxide emissions as far as possible, and offset the remaining emissions with a tree-planting program, thus setting a positive example for other event organizers.

“I am convinced that the future belongs to companies who operate responsibly from a sustainability perspective, and for whom sustainability is not just about words, but concrete actions,” said Chris Dinsdale, the CEO of Budapest Airport at the Greenairport award ceremony. He added: “We know there is strength in unity and we believe that partnership is always stronger than individual action. Joint efforts are the only way to pass on a healthy world to the next generations, and we take our role in this goal very seriously. We thank all of our Greenairport partners for their sustainability initiatives and congratulate the winners on their outstanding performances.”

The airport operator established the Greenairport program in 2015, as part of which it works together with partners, companies and authorities operating at the airport on sustainability plans for Ferenc Liszt International Airport. The scheme focuses primarily on climate protection, as the most important environmental issue connected to aviation, thus also facilitating the fulfillment of the commitments made in the international airport carbon accreditation program. The most important objective of the program is to reduce the airport’s carbon dioxide emissions, which the company achieves by reducing energy consumption, enabling the use of renewable energy, developing electric mobility, promoting, amongst other topics, reduced water use, eliminating single use plastics, encouraging selective waste collection and waste reduction. Budapest Airport also joined the international ACI Net Zero 2050 initiative, whereby it committed to reduce the carbon dioxide emissions of the airport to zero by 2050 at the latest.

Budapest Airport has been carbon neutral since 2018, through the use of carbon credits, but the company is working with its partners to reduce the harmful emissions of the airport to zero by no later than 2050.

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Read alsoCargo volume reached a new record in Budapest Airport!

IKEA owner sets aside 4 billion euros for green power projects

IKEA Hungary Budapest

Ingka Group, the owner of most IKEA stores, has earmarked 4 billion euros ($5 bln) to invest in wind and solar projects, and possibly also in energy storage, hydrogen fuel development and charging infrastructure.

Companies of all kinds are increasing their investment in a lower carbon future in response to investor pressure and as momentum builds ahead of the next round of U.N. climate talks to be hosted by Britain later this year.

Ingka, the main franchisee to brand owner Inter IKEA, has over the last decade spent 2.5 billion euros ($3.0 billion) on wind and solar power. It said in January its energy production exceeds the total used at stores and warehouses.

The earmarking of 4 billion euros “marks the next step towards 100% renewable energy across the value chain,” it said in a statement on Tuesday. It did not give a time span.

“The investments will focus on adding wind and solar projects in new countries, and the company will also consider new types of investments in areas such as energy storage, hydrogen fuel development and charging infrastructure,” it said.

IKEA aims to be climate positive – reducing greenhouse gas emissions by more than the entire IKEA value chain emits, from raw material production to customers’ disposal of their furniture – by 2030.

Inter IKEA has said the 2030 target translates into a cut of at least 15% from baseline year 2016 to 20.4 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent. In the 12 months through September 2020 they totalled 21.2 million tonnes.

Measures to reach the target range from reducing carbon already emitted, such as through buying and sustainably managing forests, to supporting suppliers in switching to renewable energy.

Ingka, the world’s biggest furniture retailer, this month announced its first renewable energy investment in Russia, in solar parks with capacity to power all IKEA stores, and part of its shopping malls, in the country.

Rainbow Shopping Bag IKEA
Read alsoIKEA takes a stand (again) supporting the LGBTQ+ community in Hungary

Hungary’s summers 50 days longer than in seventies

Széchenyi Gyógyfürdő

Temperature data of the last five decades show autumn in Hungary is much shorter now than in the 1970s, while spring is somewhat shorter, according to a new meteorological study. Summer, meanwhile, is fifty days longer.

Ecological damage includes more frequent frost damage, fewer migratory birds and the emergence of new invasive species, including mosquito species spreading new pathogens, according to the study released on masfelfok.hu on Tuesday.

Between 1971 and 1980, summer was between June 21 and August 20. In 2011-2019, it lasted from 29 May to 17 September, based on the daily temperature exceeding 17.71 C, Anna Kis, a meteorologist at Eötvös Loránd University’s meteorological faculty said in the study.

Winter, meanwhile, generally shifted to early December from late November and ended seven days earlier.

Autumn shortened to the greatest extent: in the decades before 1990, its average length was around 100 days, but in the three decades following it was less than 85 days.

As we wrote before, the weather is completely unpredictable. Over the course of a few days, the temperature dropped significantly in Hungary as well. On last Thursday, snowfall and frost were reported in several areas of Hungary. The April cold is not only dangerous for our health but also for the vegetation, read more: Did the April snow kill Hungarian pálinka making?

Tokaj, wine, region, Hungary
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Survey shows that the majority of Hungarians are environmentally-conscious

Tisza River Pollution Environment Waste Garbage Effort

A great majority of Hungarians share an interest in the future of the planet and they demonstrate awareness of environmental problems that have an influence on their lives and future generations, a survey commissioned by the Alteo energy group showed.

An average person could list 12 environmental hazards and among the most serious problems they cited deforestation, climate change and air pollution, the representative survey conducted in January showed. Some 80 percent said that environmental protection was a common responsibility for society.

A total of 92 percent of the people surveyed said they had an interest in environmental protection and 82 percent said environmental problems directly affected their lives.

Some 63 percent said the life of future generations depended on environmental protection but nearly a third of people said they were not convinced that environmental protection was among the most important tasks for individuals.

The survey revealed that 87 percent are anxious about climate change and 31 percent were very concerned about the potential consequences. They were mostly Budapest residents and university graduates, having the highest level of awareness of environmental hazards.

The survey showed that wasting food, water, energy and clothing, and global warming were the most well-known environmental issues.

The top three actions that people said they were willing to do for a greener future were selective waste collection, avoiding energy, water and food waste, and cutting back on shopping.

Renewable energy was cited by every tenth household and some 4 percent of respondents said they were driving electric cars.

People aged above 50 and those with higher levels of education demonstrated the most willingness to protect the environment.

Tisza River Pollution Environment Waste Garbage
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Featured image: facebook.com/petkupa

Serbians gather to protest against environmental pollution and exploitation

serbia protest environmental protection

Several thousand people blocked traffic in front of the Serbian parliament on Saturday in a protest against lack of government action to prevent water, land and air pollution by industries such as the mining sector.

Protesters, who came to Belgrade from all over Serbia, held banners reading “Cut corruption and crime not forests,” and “Young people are leaving because they cannot breathe”.

In recent years Serbia has started selling its mining resources to foreign companies, despite opposition by local residents who had warned that increased ore exploration could cause greater pollution.

The former Yugoslav republic, which in the 1990s went through a decade of wars and economic crisis, has lacked resources to tackle pollution. As it seeks to join the European Union, Serbia will need billions of euros of investment to meet the bloc’s environmental standards.

Aleksandar Jovanovic, one of the protest leaders, told the crowd that investors were all welcome in the country, but added, “But you cannot poison our children.”

“None of the people who have power care about anything else but money, they don’t care about ecology,” one protester, who gave his name only as Marjan and who had driven from the town of Jagodina, 140 kilometres (90 miles) from Belgrade, told Reuters.

croatia-eathquake-2021
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