Denmark, among the most intensively cultivated countries in the world with almost two-thirds of its territory farmed, set aside 43 billion Danish crowns ($6.1 billion) to acquire land from farmers ...
Danish lawmakers have agreed on a deal to plant 1 billion trees and convert 10% of farmland into forest and natural habitats ...
That’s because there are five times as many pigs and cows in Denmark as there are people. Nearly two-thirds of its land is ...
The "flatulence tax" indicates that farmers would have to pay 300 kroner (£34) per ton of methane which their animals produce ...
Denmark is to become the first country in the world to attempt to reduce emissions from agriculture by taxing farmers on ...
The tax follows months of talks between the country’s major political parties, farmers and environmental groups.
The country plans to plant a billion trees as it transitions some farmland back to forests and peatlands. On farms in Denmark ...
COPENHAGEN: Denmark will convert 15 per cent of its farmland into forest and natural habitats in an effort to reduce ...
Under the plan, Denmark will plant one billion trees on farmland over the following 20 years. Fertilizer usage has resulted ...
COPENHAGEN, Nov 18 (Reuters) - Denmark will convert 15% of its farmland into forest and natural habitats in an effort to reduce fertilizer usage, which has resulted in severe oxygen depletion in ...