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Author: elomonico

Doug Goldman Asks Korean President to Pardon Choi Yul

Continuing efforts to support past Goldman Prize winners under duress, Douglas E. Goldman, President of the Goldman Environmental Foundation, recently sent a letter to the President of South Korea asking her to release 1995 Goldman Prize recipient Choi Yul from prison. Choi was sentenced to one year in prison in March 2013 and has already…

Jorge Varela Comes Out of Retirement

1999 Goldman Prize recipient Jorge Varela recently announced that he is coming out of retirement to head up Honduras’ Association of Fisherfolk of the Gulf of Fonseca (APAGOLF) as executive director. Jorge Varela was awarded the Goldman Prize in 1999 for his marine conservation work in Honduras, particularly his efforts to protect the ecological diversity…

Shark Week Spotlight on Randall Arauz

Randall Arauz was awarded the Goldman Prize in 2010 for the role he played in drawing international attention to the inhumane and environmentally catastrophic shark finning industry in Costa Rica and around the world. More recently, Arauz celebrated a victory when five shark species were added to Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade…

Cross-Border Water Conflicts on the Rise

2012 Goldman Prize recipient Ikal Angelei recently shared a link to a stirring video posted on the Yale e360 blog about the struggle between nomadic herdsman in southern Ethiopia and northern Kenya- whose survival depends on access to the Omo River and Lake Turkana. The two bodies of water are currently being threatened by drought,…

Mesopotamian Marshlands Officially Recognized as Iraq’s First National Park

Congratulations to 2013 Goldman Environmental Prize recipient Azzam Alwash and his team at Nature Iraq, who are celebrating a huge victory this week, following the announcement that the Mesopotamian Marshlands have been officially recognized as Iraq’s first National Park! Alwash was awarded the Goldman Prize in 2013 for his unwavering dedication to restoring and preserving…

Pollution from the Garment Industry Wreaks Havoc across Asia

From China to Bangladesh, rivers run purple, blue and black with waste from garment factories. Locals say they can tell what colors are in fashion by looking at the river. Meanwhile, the air is so thick with toxic fumes- it causes regular nosebleeds, fainting, and retching- especially in children. Rampant pollution from the garment industry is…

Goldman Prize Recipients Join Forces with Al Gore to Combat Climate Change

Congratulations to Goldman Prize recipients Kimberly Wasserman and Ignace Schops on being selected to join Al Gore’s Climate Leadership Corps, part of the Climate Reality Project– an organization that seeks to fight climate change by empowering local citizens to make a difference. Schops was awarded the Goldman Prize in 2008 for the leadership role he…

2013 Prize: Q&A with Rossano Ercolini

An elementary school teacher, Rossano Ercolini began a public education campaign about the dangers of incinerators in his small Tuscan town that grew into a national Zero Waste movement. How did you begin to create awareness in your community about the dangers of incinerators and the need to adopt recycling programs? When it was announced…

2013 Prize: Q&A with Azzam Alwash

Giving up a comfortable living and family life in California, Azzam Alwash returned to war-torn Iraq to lead local communities in restoring the once-lush marshes that were turned to dust bowls during Saddam Hussein’s rule. How did you first learn about Saddam Hussein’s destruction of the Mesopotamian marshes and what motivated you to dedicate your…