List of Environmental Dates - Weeks

Weeks

  • Green Office Week
  • National Dark-Sky Week (week of new moon in April)
  • Bike to Work Week Victoria
  • National Clean Beaches Week - July 1 to 7
  • Conservation Week
  • European Mobility Week - September 16 to 22
  • Bike Week - second week in June
  • Recycle Week - 20 to 26 June 2011
  • Green Office Week
  • European Week for Waste Reduction (EWWR) - 9 days, last complete week in November
  • No Car Day - China, week of September 22
  • World Water Week in Stockholm - each year in August or September

Read more about this topic:  List Of Environmental Dates

Famous quotes containing the word weeks:

    A two-week-old infant cries an average of one and a half hours every day. This increases to approximately three hours per day when the child is about six weeks old. By the time children are twelve weeks old, their daily crying has decreased dramatically and averages less than one hour. This same basic pattern of crying is present among children from a wide range of cultures throughout the world. It appears to be wired into the nervous system of our species.
    Lawrence Kutner (20th century)

    It took six weeks of debate in the Senate to get the Arms Embargo Law repealed—and we face other delays during the present session because most of the Members of the Congress are thinking in terms of next Autumn’s election. However, that is one of the prices that we who live in democracies have to pay. It is, however, worth paying, if all of us can avoid the type of government under which the unfortunate population of Germany and Russia must exist.
    Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882–1945)

    Why should the generations overlap one another at all? Why cannot we be buried as eggs in neat little cells with ten or twenty thousand pounds each wrapped round us in Bank of England notes, and wake up, as the Sphinx wasp does, to find that its papa and mamma have not only left ample provision at its elbow but have been eaten by sparrows some weeks before we began to live consciously on our own accounts?
    Samuel Butler (1835–1902)