T test Regression Analysis

73  Defending our oceans by challenging wasteful and destructive fishing, and creating a global network of marine reserves.  Protecting the world’s remaining ancient forests which are depended on by many animals, plants and people.  Working for disarmament and peace by reducing dependence on finite resources and calling for the elimination of all nuclear weapons.  Creating a toxin free future with safer alternatives to hazardous chemicals in todays products and manufacturing.  Campaigning for sustainable agriculture by encouraging socially and ecologically responsible farming practices Greenpeace.org. Furthermore, Greenpeace has played a vital role in environmental activism and advocacy, among other things, the adoption of:  A ban on toxic waste exports to less developed countries.  A moratorium on commercial whaling.  A United Nations convention providing for better management of world fisheries.  A Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary;  A 50-year moratorium on mineral exploitation in Antarctica.  Bans on the dumping at sea of radioactive and industrial waste and disused oil installations.  An end to high-sea, large-scale driftnet fishing.  A ban on all nuclear weapons testing Greenpeace.org. 74

2. Guide to Greener Electronics

In March 2006, Greenpeace released quarterly Green Electronics Guide which ranks leading mobile phones and PC manufacturers on their global policies and practices on eliminating harmful chemicals and on taking responsibility for their products once they are discarded by consumers Greenpeace.org, 2008. Companies are ranked on information that is publicly available and clarifications and communications with the companies. Nowadays, Greenpeace has released sixteen versions since the inception of Green Electronics Guide. The guide is updated every three months. Nonetheless there were some changes where the fourteenth edition was not published on December 2009, but on January 2010. The same goes for the fifteenth and sixteenth edition, of which both editions were released on May 2010 and October 2010 respectively. In the following years Greenpeace’s guide got more attention. The prior electronics sector that focus only on mobile phones and PC then was developed by taking game console and television TV into account. The number of observed companies also increased from fourteen to sixteen companies in the sixth edition. Ranking criteria was also improved, from two domains in first edition to three domains in eighth edition: chemicals, electronic waste e-waste, and energy.