Our Company’s Corporate Social Responsibility (C.S.R.) practices are an ethical self-regulatory mandate that seeks to identify and improve deficient or defective environmental and social issues that negatively impact the growth and development of acceptable or set societal plans or goals.
It is the expected behavior of any reputable business operation. Our company involves direct philanthropic, activist programs, or charitable engagement beyond individual and enterprise-wide initiatives, including fostering, encouraging, and supporting volunteering services, time and money donations, and requiring compliance or enforcement of ethically sound business practices operations and behavior.
Climate Change
Our position on climate change is that there are too many complexities around climate change science, and society must act now before it is too late. We are ready to do our part by providing a solution using renewable and nonrenewable energy mixes. Learn more
The main driver of climate change is the greenhouse gas emission into the earth’s atmosphere. The sea levels are increasing due to melting ice, and the world oceans are expanding because they are getting warmer with an increasing volume of water with over 90 percent of the heat trapped in the world’s large bodies of oceans. The cost of our action dwarfs the cost of inaction; hence we need to act now to save the planet earth or face the consequences for our inaction.
The consequences of climate change
Many people think Global Warming is a hoax, and it is nothing but a money-making industry. Politicians are campaigning against climate change to get people’s votes. One thing is sure, the Clean Energy drive is here to stay, and the campaign is now in overdrive. The followings are the Consequences of the global effects on the climate change
- Climate change affects everybody, including plants and animals, in ways we cannot imagine.
- Climate change has created Climate Refugees of people in need of water, energy, power, light, livelihood, and houses. People are forced to relocate from their original place.
- Climate change has resulted in the unprecedented dying of reefs, corals, and other associated reefs or marine animals.
- Climate change has resulted in the loss of ecosystems and the death of many natural wonders of the world.
- Climate change has produced increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere
- Climate change is adversely affecting the fossil fuel industry.
Greenhouse emission has started to increase, with the problems getting worse and becoming harder to solve. Also, the consequences are progressively worsening, and the situation may be irreversible unless we act now. The world climate is changing as we have increasing storms, heatwaves, droughts, and food production are decreasing, leading to global food shortages and the unavoidable man-made crisis of epic proportion in the arid and semi-arid areas of the world.
Food production will decrease as the crisis worsens. There will be increasing difficulty in maintaining agricultural productivities, drinking water will be scarce, and the developing countries will be significantly impacted by climate change more than the polluting industrialized countries.
Our Solution
- Develop alternative renewable energy sources to replace the fossil fuel energy
- Promote the use of renewable and nonrenewable energy mix in commerce and industries
- Make use of fossil fuel more expensive and cost-prohibitive by taxing the origins of this energy
- Shift our energy use system from fossil fuel to renewable energy (go hydro, solar, wind biomass, etc.)
- Increase reforestation to replenish the lost forest and limit activities of loggers.
- Develop conservation programs and penalize carbon emissions. Carbon dioxide emissions come primarily from energy production, including burning coal, oil, or natural gas.
- Encourage decarbonization industries by promoting different forms of Carbon sequestration, which captures and stores atmospheric carbon dioxide. It is one method of reducing the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to reduce global climate change.
- Promote Geologic carbon sequestration is the process of storing carbon dioxide (CO2) in underground geologic formations. The CO2 is usually pressurized until it becomes a liquid, and then it is injected into porous rock formations in geologic basins. This carbon storage method is also sometimes a part of enhanced oil recovery, otherwise known as tertiary recovery, because it is typically used later in the life of a producing oil well. In enhanced oil recovery, the liquid CO2 is injected into the oil-bearing formation to reduce the oil’s viscosity and allow it to flow more easily to the oil well.
- Encourage Biological carbon sequestration refers to storing atmospheric carbon in vegetation, soils, woody products, and aquatic environments. For example, encouraging the growth of plants—particularly more significantly larger plants like trees- will help remove CO2 from the atmosphere. While deforestation is a source of carbon emission into the atmosphere, forest growth is a form of carbon sequestration, with the forests themselves serving as carbon basins.