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What is Environmental Care

Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals Through Infrastructure Development
Each day, the necessity of protecting the environment becomes more and more vital to the existence of people and biodiversity, especially in the context in which specialists are constantly pointing out that a healthy environment represents the key of having balanced, long and healthy lives ( Popescu & Luque González, 2022b ). What is more, the environment in which individuals and communities live in these days requires great attention, nourishment and protection like any other living form. Furthermore, the ideas of cooperation, mutual help, and sustainability should become the very essence of a responsible and resilient society, capable to foster life-changing solutions for a better future for all individuals and communities worldwide ( European Commission, 2023 ).
Published in Chapter:
The Impact of Cooperative Control Regulations for the Assessment of Environmental and Social Risk: The Case of Credit Placement in Ecuador
Vanessa Estefania Merino Chiliquinga (Universidad Estatal de Milagro, Ecuador), Cristina Raluca Gh. Popescu (University of Bucharest, Romania & The Bucharest University of Economic Studies, Romania), and Arturo Luque González (Universidad Técnica de Manabí, Ecuador & Observatorio Euromediterráneo de Espacio Público y Democrac URJC, Spain)
DOI: 10.4018/979-8-3693-0794-6.ch008
Abstract
Cooperative financial institutions operate under general cooperative principles, with a vision for economic, social, and environmental balance. In Ecuador, this model of finance gained momentum in 2012 with the creation of the superintendence of the social and solidarity economy, which regulates the country's cooperative sector. This research focuses on segment one, institutions with assets greater than $80 million. Currently, developments in the environmental area, or green finance, fall under the control standard for the management of environmental and social risk in savings and credit cooperatives and mutualists. The regulation provides the guidelines for implementing the social environmental risk management system (SARAS), which classifies risk based on the environmental impact of economic activities. It also includes a list of activities of activities excluded from financial services due to their negative implications for the social and environmental areas. This research analyzes and critiques the aspects, requirements, and conditions of the implementation of these regulations.
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