Category: Change Leadership
What Are Climate Change “Hot Spots”?
What Are Climate Change Hot Spots?
Most exotic visitors at annemariayritys.com so far this month: someone from American Samoa.
What do you know about American Samoa, or about geography in general?
American Samoa may be one of the many islands worldwide that will suffer from sea levels rising within upcoming decades/this century.
No one knows for sure how much sea levels will rise in different parts of the world, but many inhabited islands are at risk of becoming non-habitable.
Moreover, at least 60% of the world ‘s population lives in coastal regions that are equally much vulnerable to sea levels rising. This is why coastal cities are called “climate change hot spots”.
In addition, the vast majority of our world ́s currently around operating 450 nuclear plants are located in the lowland coastal areas, making them extra vulnerable to e.g. sea levels rising and/or tsunamis:
CarbonBrief: Mapped: The world’s nuclear power plants
Plagiarism is a Crime. Are You Aware?
With both content management and marketing being a huge business today, it is always devastating to notice cases of plagiarism. If you have ever been a college or higher level student, you must be aware of the fact that plagiarism is not only unethical and immoral, but also illegal. Anyone involved in creative industries must be knowledgeable about copyright issues overall, including how to refer to, or how to cite original content.
As a creative business person and entrepreneur myself, I have published hundreds of articles online. My Tweets have been viewed more than one billion (1.000.000.000) times. I have had to be careful with copyright issues many times, and check what I can do as a writer/publisher on digital and social media, and what I am NOT allowed to do.
With more than half a million contacts/followers on digital and social media in at least 227 different countries worldwide, I can personally not afford to make mistakes like plagiarizing content from other professionals. As a matter of fact, it is deeply devastating and shameful to notice people plagiarizing content (photos, text), especially when you personally or your staff is doing everything to follow general legislation and rules to check possible plagiarization.
Just a few days before Christmas 2018, I received an email from one of my followers who asked me if I am aware of the fact that my articles are being plagiarized, followed by a specific person´s name and a link to the text that had been copied. I checked the text, which was a direct copy of an article that I had written and published one year earlier both on my business website https://www.annemariayritys.com, on LinkedIn, and through BizCatalyst360°, a Miami-based online publisher with whom I have been cooperating with for more than three years now.
This was not the first time in history that my creative work was plagiarized, but I do hope that it was the last. Needless to mention any names at this point, I have decided to remove and block people from my network, who have been reported by some of my other contacts/followers to have plagiarized my content.
Anyone active and working within the creative industry must be knowledgeable about, and follow general rules concerning content creation and management. This includes the understanding about what you can do online, and what you cannot do. Direct copies of other people´s content is one form of plagiarism, and thus illegal. Make sure to learn the basics and essentials of copyright issues, and for instance how to cite/refer to articles published by other businesses, or by other entrepreneurs.
Anyone in the creative industry has a right/copyright to their work, and it is up to that person to decide how his or her work can be used by other businesses, entrepreneurs or individuals. Thank you for taking the time to read this article, and for your consideration in terms of copyright issues and possible infringements.
Anne-Maria Yritys. January 4th, 2019.
All rights reserved.
What Do You Know About Climate-Friendly Food Production?
Suomessa kauppojen hyllyt pursuavat mitä erilaisempia riisituotteita samalla kun kotimainen ohra on jäänyt ihmisiltä lähes unohduksiin. Ohra on edullinen, kotimainen, maukas ja ympäristöystävällinen vaihtoehto riisille, jonka tuotanto/viljely yksin tutkitusti aiheuttaa ainakin 7% maailman metaanipäästöistä.
Riisin syönnin korvaaminen ohralla on siis ilmastoteko.
Suomessa on arvokkaita elintarvikkeita, joita voidaan markkinoida maailmallekin. Miksi maksamme maltaita esim. ulkomaisista supermarjoista samalla kun omat metsämme joka vuosi pursuavat omista vitamiinipommeista?
Ymmärrämmekö omien elintarvikkeidemme päälle? Suomesta viedään jo nyt esim. tonneittain herkkutatteja Italiaan joka vuosi.
A-M. Yritys 29.12.2018
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In Finland supermarkets are selling plenty of different rice products while at the same time, our domestic barley has nearly been forgotten. Barley is an inexpensive, domestic, tasty and climate-friendly alternative to rice, the cultivation of which according to research, alone causes at least seven (7) percent of all methane emissions worldwide.
Replacing rice consumption with barley is thus an environmentally friendly act.
Finland is home to valuable foodstuff that can be marketed not only in Finland, but to the rest of the world. Why do we, for instance, pay high prices for foreign superberries while our own forests each year produce our own vitamin bombs?
Do we understand the value of our own (natural) food products? At the time being, Finland already exports tons of porcini to e.g. Italy each year.
A-M. Yritys 29.12.2018

What is a Carbon Market?
How Are You Acting Upon the Paris Agreement?
How Can You Act Upon The Paris Agreement?
The time to act is NOW.
Less empty words => more concrete actions.
Paris Agreement 2015/Art. 12:
“Parties shall cooperate in taking measures, as appropriate, to enhance climate change education, training, public awareness, public participation and public access to information, recognizing the importance of these steps with respect to enhancing actions under this agreement”. (Paris Agreement 2015; United Nations 2015 Adoption of the Paris Agreement).
What Kind of a Consumer Are You?
How Can You Become A Better Consumer?
You don’t always have to buy clothes. You can receive clothes as gifts, through recycling or just find clothes outdoors, in nature; earlier this year, I found a pair of sports shorts outdoors, which still had a price tag on them. Today, I found a pair of Regatta ́s Pack It black outdoor trousers, perfectly suitable. Now I ́ll just wash them and use them.
I have also found sunglasses, cycling glasses, torches and cash (money) outdoors this year. Is there something our environment wants to tell me by sending me all these free gifts?
At least it is highly recommended to keep both your eyes and your other senses open while outdoors, as you never know what you will encounter or find.
Recycling is no longer a trend, but a necessity for all human beings.
Our Earth can no longer take human greed and a desire for overconsumption of poor-quality goods. The global garment industry is one of the worst environmental polluters beside agriculture and fossil fuels.
Therefore, it is highly recommended to consider what kinds of textiles to use, and whether you always have to buy first hand instead of buying second hand clothes. Or, does one ́s closet have to be full of unnecessary clothes when one can live with less than? There is nothing worse than people buying poor-quality clothes and textiles, especially when most of these dust in the closet and go unused. Or, when textiles are being thrown away instead of being recycled.
For instance H&M has for a long time already been recycling textiles and clothes, and it is possible to recycle usable clothes e.g. through UFF unless one wants to try to sell them second hand.
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