Across
- 4. is a powerful and essential sustainability tool that evaluates the environmental impacts of a product or service across its entire life cycle, from raw material extraction to the end of life.
- 5. refers to the delivery of goods and services to meet human needs and improve quality of life while progressively reducing their environmental impacts of goods and resource intensity during their life-cycle.
- 6. capable of being broken down especially into innocuous products by the action of living things (such as microorganisms).
- 7. refer to the unintended consequences of economic activities that affect the environment and third parties not directly involved in the activity.
- 9. is the practice of companies present misleading or false information about their environmental impact to appear more sustainable or eco-friendly than they truly are.
Down
- 1. is a self-regulating business model where companies integrate social, environmental, and ethical concerns into their operations and stakeholder relations, going beyond legal compliance to positively impact society
- 2. is a critical concept that influences how future benefits and costs of sustainability initiatives are valued, impacting investment decisions and policymaking.
- 3. is a sustainable production and consumption model designed to eliminate waste, pollution, and the need for new raw materials.
- 8. is the maximising of the supply of money, materials, staff, and other assets that can be drawn on by a person or organization in order to function effectively, with minimum wasted (natural) resource expenses.
