Browse data: PolicyIntervention
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- Application (39)
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Showing below up to 10 results in range #1 to #10.
- Expanding Reduced Impact Logging (Increasing the share of produced wood yielded with Reduced Impact Logging (RIL) practices instead of conventional logging practices., Component: Forest management)
- Improve behaviour (Reduce the health impacts of malnutrition and inadequate access to safe drinking water, basic sanitaion and modern sources of energy, through, for example, improving female education, promoting good hygiene and providing good indoor good ventilation, Component: Human development)
- Improve quality of access (Improve the quality of access to drinking water, sanitation and modern sources of energy, through, for example, household connections to drinking-water supply and the use of LPG or kerosene instead of traditional biomass on improved biomass stoves, Component: Human development)
- Improved manure storage (Improved manure storage systems (ST), considering 20% lower NH3 emissions from animal housing and storage systems., Component: Nutrients)
- Increase access to food (Increase access to food by targeting food prices for the poorest households, Component: Human development)
- Increase access to water (Increase access to safe drinking water and improved sanitation by lowering prices and investing in infrastructure, Component: Human development)
- Increase forest plantations (Increase the use of wood from highly productive wood plantations instead of wood from (semi-) natural forests., Component: Forest management)
- Integrated manure management (Better integration of manure in crop production systems. This consists of recycling of manure that under the baseline scenario ends up outside the agricultural system (e.g. manure used as fuel), in crop systems to substitute fertiliser. In addition, there is improved integration of animal manure in crop systems, particularly in industrialised countries., Component: Nutrients)
- More sustainable forest management (Sustainable forest management aims for maintaining long-term harvest potential and good ecological status of forests (e.g. the nutrient balance and biodiversity). This can be implemented by (i) enlarging the return period when a forest can be harvested again; (ii) only using certain fractions of the harvested biomass and leave the remaining part in the forests., Component: Forest management)
- Sanitation measures (Increase the access to improved sanitation, and connection to sewage systems; institution of wastewater treatment installations; recycling of human waste for substitution of synthetic fertilisers., Component: Nutrients)