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"million trees program"
20 professional editorial images found
#8919312
27 September 2022
Trees planted as part of the 'Milion Drzew' or million trees program are seen in the Praga district in Warsaw, Poland on 27 September, 2022.
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#8919310
27 September 2022
Trees planted as part of the 'Milion Drzew' or million trees program are seen in the Praga district in Warsaw, Poland on 27 September, 2022.
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#8919306
27 September 2022
Trees planted as part of the 'Milion Drzew' or million trees program are seen in the Praga district in Warsaw, Poland on 27 September, 2022.
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#8919304
27 September 2022
Trees planted as part of the 'Milion Drzew' or million trees program are seen in the Praga district in Warsaw, Poland on 27 September, 2022.
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#8919302
27 September 2022
Trees planted as part of the 'Milion Drzew' or million trees program are seen in the Praga district in Warsaw, Poland on 27 September, 2022.
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#6831082
26 June 2021
People line up to receive COVID-19 vaccine during mass vaccination program in Denpasar, Bali, Indonesia on June 26 2021. Recently, COVID-19 cases surge in Indonesia major cities. Indonesia has recorded 2 Million cases since the first case in March 2020.
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#6789162
8 June 2021
A worker is building a house in the grand viona housing estate in Ciseeng, Bogor, Indonesia, on June 8, 2021 housing subsidized by the Indonesian government. The Government of Indonesia through the Public Housing Savings Management Agency (BP Tapera) as a public housing savings management institution is committed to helping the community to have decent housing, in line with President Joko Widodo's government program in realizing this program. a million houses. In collaboration with the State Savings Bank (BTN), the housing subsidy program for state civil servants and citizens with incomes of less than 5 million rupiah is still ongoing amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
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#6539826
20 March 2021
A woman is collecting drinking water, Salinity effect seen in soil as a result trees has died after Cyclone amphan hit in Satkhira, Bangladesh on March 20, 2021. Deep cracks seen in a field as rise of sea-level causes deep cracks by leaving salt on ground after evaporation. Bangladesh is one of the countrys most vulnerable to the effects of climate change. The regular and severe natural hazards that Bangladesh already suffers from tropical cyclones, river erosion, flood, landslides and drought are all set to increase in intensity and frequency as a result of climate change. Sea level rise will increasingly inundate coastal land in Bangladesh and dramatic coastal and river erosion will destroy lands and homes. These and the many other adverse effects of climate change will severely impact the economy and development of the country. One of the most dramatic impacts will be the forced movement of people throughout Bangladesh as a result of losing their homes, lands, property and livelihoods to the effects of climate change. While it is impossible to predict completely accurate figures of how many people will be displaced by climate change, the best current estimates state that sea level rise alone will displace 18 million Bangladeshis within the next 40 years. The vast majority of these people will be displaced within Bangladesh not across international borders presenting the Government with enormous challenges, particularly when it comes to finding places to live and work for those displaced
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#6539828
20 March 2021
A woman is collecting drinking water, Salinity effect seen in soil as a result trees has died after Cyclone amphan hit in Satkhira, Bangladesh on March 20, 2021. Deep cracks seen in a field as rise of sea-level causes deep cracks by leaving salt on ground after evaporation. Bangladesh is one of the countrys most vulnerable to the effects of climate change. The regular and severe natural hazards that Bangladesh already suffers from tropical cyclones, river erosion, flood, landslides and drought are all set to increase in intensity and frequency as a result of climate change. Sea level rise will increasingly inundate coastal land in Bangladesh and dramatic coastal and river erosion will destroy lands and homes. These and the many other adverse effects of climate change will severely impact the economy and development of the country. One of the most dramatic impacts will be the forced movement of people throughout Bangladesh as a result of losing their homes, lands, property and livelihoods to the effects of climate change. While it is impossible to predict completely accurate figures of how many people will be displaced by climate change, the best current estimates state that sea level rise alone will displace 18 million Bangladeshis within the next 40 years. The vast majority of these people will be displaced within Bangladesh not across international borders presenting the Government with enormous challenges, particularly when it comes to finding places to live and work for those displaced
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#5648526
23 April 2020
A view of a Shake Shack burger joint in Madison Square, Park New York City USA during coronavirus pandemic on April 22, 2020. WSJ reports Shake Shack Inc. said it would return a $10 million loan from a federal coronavirus aid program that some small restaurants say shouldn’t have made funds available to big companies.
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#5648528
23 April 2020
A view of a Shake Shack burger joint in Madison Square, Park New York City USA during coronavirus pandemic on April 22, 2020. WSJ reports Shake Shack Inc. said it would return a $10 million loan from a federal coronavirus aid program that some small restaurants say shouldn’t have made funds available to big companies.
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#5648670
23 April 2020
A view of a Shake Shack burger joint in Madison Square, Park New York City USA during coronavirus pandemic on April 22, 2020. WSJ reports Shake Shack Inc. said it would return a $10 million loan from a federal coronavirus aid program that some small restaurants say shouldn’t have made funds available to big companies.
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#3581766
22 December 2018
Forest restoration project in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2018. Laos was known as ‘The land of a million elephants’ in the past, today the elephant population in the country stands at around 800 individuals. Half of them is made up of captive elephants, and their number is in decline; the owners are not interested in breeding animals (the cow needs at least four years out of work during her pregnancy and lactation), illegal trafficking to China and other neighboring countries continues. Against this backdrop, the Elephant Conservation Center is the only one organization in Laos who is interested in maintaining the population and breeding of elephants. They have the only elephant hospital and research laboratory in Laos. The Center was created in 2011, and now the team is protecting 29 elephants that had been working in the logging industry or mass tourism, and 530 hectares of forest around Nam Tien Lake in Sayaboury. ‘If we have extra money, we buy an elephant,’ says Anthony, the manager. The primary goal of the Center, besides conservation and breeding, is to reintroduce socially coherent groups of healthy elephants to a natural forest where they can contribute to the increase of the wild population. For this reason, a special socialization programme has been developed by the biologists, where domesticated elephants learn to communicate and survive in the wild under the supervision of specialists. ‘There are not enough elephants in Laos,’ says Chrisantha, the biologist of the center. ‘We need around 5000 of a species to sustain a population, and we are nowhere near that. The efforts we are making now at least give a bit of hope for the future.’ (
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#2403602
3 January 2018
Baby Borneo Orangutan seen behind the tree in Jakarta, Indonesia on January 03, 2018. The Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme (SOCP) is working hard to build an “Orangutan Haven” in North Sumatra to accommodate disabled orangutans and orangutans that cannot be released to their natural habitat. Beginning construction four years ago with a US$2 million budget, the 48-hectare facility in Sibolangit, Deli Serdang regency, is expected to be ready by early 2019 to give long-term protection and provide improved living conditions for the disabled and unreleasable arboreal mammals. Five orangutans, including a female, will be placed in the facility by the end of 2018,, which will be open for public visits. The five could not be released to their natural habitat as they no longer have the ability to survive in the wild, posing a risk to themselves as well as other populations. Nine artificial islands measuring between 600 and 800 square meters are being prepared by the SOCP in the Orangutan Haven, which is the first such facility in the world.
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#2403635
3 January 2018
Baby Borneo Orangutan playing near the tree in Jakarta, Indonesia on January 03, 2018. The Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme (SOCP) is working hard to build an “Orangutan Haven” in North Sumatra to accommodate disabled orangutans and orangutans that cannot be released to their natural habitat. Beginning construction four years ago with a US$2 million budget, the 48-hectare facility in Sibolangit, Deli Serdang regency, is expected to be ready by early 2019 to give long-term protection and provide improved living conditions for the disabled and unreleasable arboreal mammals. Five orangutans, including a female, will be placed in the facility by the end of 2018,, which will be open for public visits. The five could not be released to their natural habitat as they no longer have the ability to survive in the wild, posing a risk to themselves as well as other populations. Nine artificial islands measuring between 600 and 800 square meters are being prepared by the SOCP in the Orangutan Haven, which is the first such facility in the world.
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#2403654
3 January 2018
Baby Borneo Orangutan seen playing behind the tree in Jakarta, Indonesia on January 03, 2018. The Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme (SOCP) is working hard to build an “Orangutan Haven” in North Sumatra to accommodate disabled orangutans and orangutans that cannot be released to their natural habitat. Beginning construction four years ago with a US$2 million budget, the 48-hectare facility in Sibolangit, Deli Serdang regency, is expected to be ready by early 2019 to give long-term protection and provide improved living conditions for the disabled and unreleasable arboreal mammals. Five orangutans, including a female, will be placed in the facility by the end of 2018,, which will be open for public visits. The five could not be released to their natural habitat as they no longer have the ability to survive in the wild, posing a risk to themselves as well as other populations. Nine artificial islands measuring between 600 and 800 square meters are being prepared by the SOCP in the Orangutan Haven, which is the first such facility in the world.
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