vimarsana.com

Page 44 - தொழிலாளி சர்வதேச தொழிற்சங்கம் ஆஃப் வடக்கு அமெரிக்கா News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

The workplace of the future will probably remain under surveillance

The workplace of the future will probably remain under surveillance The pandemic unleashed new forms of digital employee surveillance that are likely here to stay December 15, 2020 Workers are screened for COVID-19 as they enter the Toyota plant in Cambridge, Ont.(Courtesy of Toyota Canada) In a video he recorded on his smartphone in-person tours are out of the question these days senior national manager of external affairs Scott MacKenzie demonstrates what the entrance procedure looks like for workers at the Toyota plant in Cambridge, Ont. He walks from the parking lot through a set of revolving doors, which have signs asking workers to please use their elbows to push them.

Ceres releases a set of practices for an equitable and just

CONTENT: Press Release Recognizes the clean energy transition as an opportunity to create a more equitable, just and sustainable economy Recommends five best practices to bring local communities and workforces into planning with clean energy project developers, purchasers, investors and regulators December 13, 2020 /3BL Media/ - As clean energy deployment accelerates across the U.S. with solar and wind power now supplying more electricity than coal and $1.7 trillion in new renewable projects expected this decade, Ceres issues today a set of recommendations to help ensure local communities and workers are not left behind in the clean energy transition. Recognizing in the transition a huge opportunity to create a more equitable, just and sustainable economy, the report Practices for Just, Equitable and Sustainable Development of Clean Energy Resources details how the rapid clean energy deployment underway can and must embrace local stakeholders’ needs for local jobs, economic be

Ceres Releases a Set of Practices for an Equitable and Just Transition to Clean Energy

Recognizes the clean energy transition as an opportunity to create a more equitable, just and sustainable economy Recommends five best practices to bring local communities and workforces into planning with clean energy project developers, purchasers, investors and regulators December 13, 2020 /3BL Media/ - As clean energy deployment accelerates across the U.S. with solar and wind power now supplying more electricity than coal and $1.7 trillion in new renewable projects expected this decade, Ceres issues today a set of recommendations to help ensure local communities and workers are not left behind in the clean energy transition. Recognizing in the transition a huge opportunity to create a more equitable, just and sustainable economy, the report Practices for Just, Equitable and Sustainable Development of Clean Energy Resources details how the rapid clean energy deployment underway can and must embrace local stakeholders’ needs for local jobs, economic benefits and protection of

Green energy firms urged to invest in workers, localities

As the transition to green energy continues accelerating in the U.S., a new paper from sustainability nonprofit Ceres outlines best practices for green energy developers. With the Biden administration aiming to push as much as $1.7 trillion into a plan to boost renewable power over the next 10 years, the paper recommends that developers invest in and engage with their local workforce and communities. This ensures developers’ projects are done in an equitable way for all stakeholders; and, without this, the report said, the future of green energy development is jeopardized. “The U.S. energy sector’s shift to clean energy is creating a once-in-a-generation opportunity to build a more just, equitable and sustainable society,” the paper said.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.