1. New Country Compare Tool

    NEW HAVEN, Conn. - Today the Yale Data-Driven Environmental Solutions Group (Data-Driven Yale) researchers released a new tool that allows users to see how “green” countries are relative to one another.

  2. China's Provincial Environmental Performance Index

    Case Study: China's Provincial Environmental Performance Index
    Scope: Environmental Performance of 30 Chinese provinces from 2004 to 2013.                     
    First Released: April 2016
    Intended Audience: Civil Society, Administrative Authorities, and Research Institutes
    Potential Application: National and subnational (provincial) policymaking

  3. South Korea shuns diesel following emissions scandal

  4. Air Pollution’s Hazy Future in South Korea

    More than half of South Korea’s citizens regularly breathe dangerously polluted air, producing serious health effects for the highly urbanized nation. In 2013, more than 20,000 premature deaths were blamed on the country’s foul air. On a typical day, 25 million South Koreans inhale an unsafe amount of microscopic particles of various sizes (PM2.5, PM10 and others).

  5. Armenia Ranks 37th In 2016 Environmental Performance Index

  6. Korea's Air Is Dirty, But It's Not All Close-Neighbor China's Fault

  7. The Greenest Province in Viet Nam?

    The Environmental Performance Index (EPI) provides a snapshot that only scratches the surface of how countries perform on critical ecosystem and human health issues. After analyzing their national scores, countries sometimes undertake more detailed studies at the subnational scale to investigate areas for improvement at jurisdictions best positioned to enact local change. In narrowing the scope to a single country, governments are also able to tailor indicator frameworks to environmental outcomes most relevant to their country contexts.

  8. New Video of Malaysia's EPI Launch

    One year ago this month, Malaysia launched the second iteration of its state-level Environmental Performance Index, the Malaysia EPI (or MyEPI), which showed the nation’s gains since its inaugural 2012 assessment. The country reduced its environmental burden of disease – meaning fewer of its people were sickened by environmental hazards – from 2012 to 2014, and its agriculture and land-use, resource efficiency, and environmental governance scores also improved.

  9. Making the ‘Sustainable’ Attainable

    If there ever was a gathering of people who fully subscribe to the adage,  ‘you can’t manage what you can’t measure,’ this was it.

  10. EPI at the United Nations

    “The 2016 EPI ranks 180 countries—our greatest number ever,” declared Kim Samuel, Director of the Samuel Group of Companies, Professor of Practice at McGill University, and co-founder of the Environmental Performance Index (EPI). “It covers 99 percent of the world’s population and 97 percent of global land area,” Ms. Samuel continued in her opening remarks at the May 9 Global Metrics for the Environment event held at UN Headquarters in New York City.

  11. “Yale’s Lies?” EPI’s Rankings Ignite National Controversy in Turkey

    On January 27, a Turkish reporter for the Dogan News Agency wrote about Turkey’s low ranking on the 2016 Yale Environmental Performance Index (EPI). Two days later, Dogan News published “Turkey on the Bottom,” an exposé bemoaning Turkey’s “retrogressive decade” of environmental performance that pushed the country’s Climate & Energy and Biodiversity & Habitat scores below those of Iraq and Syria - and “even behind Libya and Haiti.” Within hours, the article was shared thousands of times on Facebook alone.

  12. In The Guardian: Australia drops 10 spots in Greg Hunt's most trusted climate rankings

  13. In The Huffington Post: U.S. Could Do Much More To Protect The Environment, Report Finds

  14. In The Sydney Morning Herald: Australia sinks on 'most credible' environmental index in the world

  15. In The Huffington Post: Climate, Community, Collaboration, Connection: Why Measuring Environmental Performance Matters

  16. In Grist: The United States ranks pathetically low on list of greenest nations

  17. In Atlantic City Lab: Half the World Still Breathes Polluted Air

  18. 2016 EPI REPORT

  19. Press Conference: Presenting the latest Environmental Protection Index by Yale University

  20. EPI Reveals Dire State of Fisheries and Air Pollution

  21. 2016 EPI Launch at World Economic Forum

  22. Building a breathable planet

  23. Mapping Global Air Pollution Down to the Neighborhood Level

  24. How dirty is your air? This map shows you

  25. What's in Your Air?

  26. Angel Hsu: Grist 50 Profile

  27. Including local city voices in global goals

    More than half of the world’s population lives in cities, with an influx of over one million additional people each week. A new Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) dedicated to cities reflects this new urban reality. The Urban SDG sets universal goals and targets for cities around the world on issues related to housing, planning, transportation, and environmental impacts. But there’s a knowledge gap.

  28. Sneak Peek: Updates to the 2016 EPI

    From the moment we launched the 2014 Environmental Performance Index (EPI), our team has been hard at work enhancing methodologies and designing  the 2016 report. The EPI team strives to collect the best available data, and we continuously improve how we measure environmental performance. New research, technological advances, and the explosion of data points are constantly changing the global environmental landscape, challenging the EPI to be dynamic and innovative.

  29. Measuring Urban Sustainability in Seoul, South Korea

    The Seoul subway has 18 train lines and over 500 stops that every day move 10 million South Koreans from point A to B (or 8호선 to 5호선). The Seoul metro region is home to over 25 million people, which is half of the country’s population, making it the world’s third largest.

  30. EPI’s foray into crowdsourcing wastewater data: How did it go?

    Discharging untreated wastewater into the environment has profound impacts on freshwater quality and human health.  Scientists have linked the discharge of untreated wastewater to increased child mortality and ecosystem degradation. Yet, until a team of Environmental Performance Index (EPI) researchers created a wastewater treatment indicator in 2014, no global database reported on wastewater treatment.

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