Eco Conferences LTH: 9 years providing environmental educati
Mar 9, 2024 4:14:11 GMT
Post by account_disabled on Mar 9, 2024 4:14:11 GMT
In September 2010, the leading brand of LTH batteries, from the company Clarios, took a big step in the area of Corporate Social Responsibility. Aware of how important it is to teach children to know and care for the environment, they have promoted an environmental education program, called Eco Jornadas LTH, which so far has covered 32 parks in Mexico.
The first edition of the LTH Eco Days Chile Mobile Number List was an event that took place simultaneously in three cities: Monterrey, in Chipinque Park; Mexico City, in the Tlalpan Forest and Desierto de los Leones; and in Torreón, in the Cañón de Fernández park, respectively. More than 9 thousand boys and girls were impacted in this first experience that connected them with nature. At the same time, teaching materials were delivered that were inspiration for the entire family.
Since then, the environmental education programs, through the LTH Eco Days, have been replicated in different parks, schools and natural areas in CDMX, Guadalajara, Monterrey, Torreón, Celaya, Oaxaca, Mérida, Tuxtla, Veracruz, Coatzacoalcos, Aguascalientes , Chihuahua, Reynosa, Playa del Carmen, Papantla, Morelia, Cholula, Los Cabos, Puerto Peñasco, Huatulco, Papantla, Uruapan, Chacahua, Lacanja, Comitán, Palenque, Ocosingo, Lerdo, Frontera, Tehuacán and Tepotzotlán, training more than 670 thousand agents of change.
To achieve the objective of transferring values of care, respect and conservation of the environment, LTH has formed alliances with different NGOs and Civil Associations, responsible for teaching environmental education workshops in different cities. Some of the allied organizations are: Preservamb, Xochitla Foundation, Chipinque Ecological Park, Pro de Nazas, Los Cuartos Ecological Center, Quetzalli Environmental Education Center, La Planta Ecological Park and the Francisco Peláez Ethnobotanical Garden.
This is how, in each edition, an average of 100 boys and girls come together to enjoy a day, playing and learning why they should help preserve the planet. The day ends when the boys and girls are taught how to plant cuttings, which they later take home to take care of and watch them grow. “LTH's commitment has been fundamental to providing environmental education to children in Mexico. Thanks to this, we have been able to reach different cities and train agents of change from an early age, contributing to the future of the planet,” said Jesús Mazza, director of Preservamb.
This program has been so successful that its coverage has currently been extended to other countries in Central America and the Caribbean. LTH added to its initiative, a modality in which, in alliance with its distributors, traveling environmental education programs are carried out in different primary schools in the country. Another modality is the Family Days, through which the opportunity is opened for families and the general public, who attend the different parks on weekends, to participate in activities that promote environmental care.
“We know that companies also have a role in generating change, that is why one of our objectives is to be able to contribute to caring for the environment by going a little further. That is, impacting thousands of children, so that tomorrow they will be responsible adults with ecological awareness. We firmly believe that if the private sector, environmental NGOs and schools join forces, we will be able to generate a change of mentality, in favor of nature, that will help the planet” said José Antonio Rodríguez Virués, Manager of Communication, Advertising and Public Relations of Clarios Mexico.
LTH will continue to provide environmental education in different cities in Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean, to prepare agents of change and help transform the future for generations to come.
The first edition of the LTH Eco Days Chile Mobile Number List was an event that took place simultaneously in three cities: Monterrey, in Chipinque Park; Mexico City, in the Tlalpan Forest and Desierto de los Leones; and in Torreón, in the Cañón de Fernández park, respectively. More than 9 thousand boys and girls were impacted in this first experience that connected them with nature. At the same time, teaching materials were delivered that were inspiration for the entire family.
Since then, the environmental education programs, through the LTH Eco Days, have been replicated in different parks, schools and natural areas in CDMX, Guadalajara, Monterrey, Torreón, Celaya, Oaxaca, Mérida, Tuxtla, Veracruz, Coatzacoalcos, Aguascalientes , Chihuahua, Reynosa, Playa del Carmen, Papantla, Morelia, Cholula, Los Cabos, Puerto Peñasco, Huatulco, Papantla, Uruapan, Chacahua, Lacanja, Comitán, Palenque, Ocosingo, Lerdo, Frontera, Tehuacán and Tepotzotlán, training more than 670 thousand agents of change.
To achieve the objective of transferring values of care, respect and conservation of the environment, LTH has formed alliances with different NGOs and Civil Associations, responsible for teaching environmental education workshops in different cities. Some of the allied organizations are: Preservamb, Xochitla Foundation, Chipinque Ecological Park, Pro de Nazas, Los Cuartos Ecological Center, Quetzalli Environmental Education Center, La Planta Ecological Park and the Francisco Peláez Ethnobotanical Garden.
This is how, in each edition, an average of 100 boys and girls come together to enjoy a day, playing and learning why they should help preserve the planet. The day ends when the boys and girls are taught how to plant cuttings, which they later take home to take care of and watch them grow. “LTH's commitment has been fundamental to providing environmental education to children in Mexico. Thanks to this, we have been able to reach different cities and train agents of change from an early age, contributing to the future of the planet,” said Jesús Mazza, director of Preservamb.
This program has been so successful that its coverage has currently been extended to other countries in Central America and the Caribbean. LTH added to its initiative, a modality in which, in alliance with its distributors, traveling environmental education programs are carried out in different primary schools in the country. Another modality is the Family Days, through which the opportunity is opened for families and the general public, who attend the different parks on weekends, to participate in activities that promote environmental care.
“We know that companies also have a role in generating change, that is why one of our objectives is to be able to contribute to caring for the environment by going a little further. That is, impacting thousands of children, so that tomorrow they will be responsible adults with ecological awareness. We firmly believe that if the private sector, environmental NGOs and schools join forces, we will be able to generate a change of mentality, in favor of nature, that will help the planet” said José Antonio Rodríguez Virués, Manager of Communication, Advertising and Public Relations of Clarios Mexico.
LTH will continue to provide environmental education in different cities in Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean, to prepare agents of change and help transform the future for generations to come.