Latest Entries

We Have Only One Planet

submitted by Gzira St.Monica School : Ella Farrugia  for 11-14
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under Photos Reporting photo
awarded: Participation

Illegally dumped garbage can kill or stunt planet growth (https://www.plano.gov/486/Harmful-Effects-of-Litter).

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Bini bini kullimkien, kemm fil-ġonna u fil-widien

submitted by Gzira St.Monica School : Emma Rose Xuereb  for 11-14
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under Photos Reporting photo
awarded: Participation

Kull fejn tmur tara bini, djar, appartamenti u vilel. Qisu rridu neqirduh l-ambjent tagħna u nisirquh għalina. X’se jgħidulna wliedna meta jaraw x’ħallejna? Inħarsu madwarna u nirriflettu ftit.

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Think Future

submitted by Gzira St.Monica School : Anna Micallef  for 11-14
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under Photos Series Of Photos
awarded: Commended

These photos depict development in Malta and how it affects the little bit of nature on our small island. If we continue like this, will we still have a place without buildings and development?

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There’s A Space To Place Your Waste

submitted by Gzira St.Monica School : Emma Leigh Callus  for 11-14
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under Photos Series Of Photos
awarded: Commended

This trashcan found in Buskett Gardens is empty. There is absolutely nothing inside. People constantly visit Buskett Gardens for various reasons. Surely, they might need to dispose of something during their time there. So why isn’t the trashcan full? People need to be mindful of their waste. It is as if trashcans serve no purpose. This makes no sense.

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Chaotic Construction and Cars

submitted by Gzira St.Monica School : Elena Portelli  for 11-14
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under Photos Reporting photo
awarded: Commended

This photo was taken at a site in Ħad-Dingli. Even though this was a particularly green area, with all the construction going on nowadays, buildings are everywhere and are starting to become an eyesore. Not only that, but in densely populated areas, many people use cars. This accounts for 61% of CO2 emissions from EU transport (https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/headlines/society/20190313STO31218/co2-emissions-from-cars-facts-and-figures-infographics) and in places with too many buildings and cars, and too little trees, this could lead to an increase in lung problems, like asthma. In a report released by Harvard Medical School and the Center for Health and the Global Environment, it was found that there was an increase in asthma by 160% from 1980 to 1994 among preschool children. This observation was linked to the global rise in CO2 emissions, affecting respiratory exposure to various atmospheric pollens, mold, and fungi. (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3196488/) Let us not be the problem but the solution.

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