Displaying 1 - 25 of 80
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It started with a single email to Dignity Health.
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The question remains: Can corporates persist and prevail in their defiance of Trump-era environmental policies?
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Investors: Keep disclosures of material climate risks specific and simple.
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The year-long proof of concept also involves U.K. supermarket giant Sainsbury's and packaging company Sappi. It will start with tea farmers in Africa.
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New technologies from Canadian companies CarbonCure and CarbiCrete are part of an XPRIZE focused on beneficial uses of carbon dioxide.
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Technology is changing fast. Cities, state and industry groups hope to stay ahead of the curve.
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Hazel Technologies borrows from nature's chemistry to tackle supply chain spoilage.
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Their common approach: Remain open-minded, review often.
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The 'ecodistrict' project required cooperation from the city, architects and a corporate neighbor.
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Startup Solugen wants to clean up the manufacturing process for the bathroom staple, which also offers a host of industrial uses.
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Australian-born Nicole Rycroft cultivates transformational, not transactional, relationships with the likes of H&M, VF Corp. and Levi Strauss & Co.
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To harvest water from the air, NexLoop seeks to pilot its AquaWeb prototypes with urban farms and greenhouses.
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Experts talk up public-private collaboration for 'urban planning 2.0.'
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America's largest farm coop is making progress by allying with a local group of municipal utilities.
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And if you don't want to eat it, it will dissolve quickly in water.
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The founders of Mango Materials stumbled across their idea by accident.
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A heightened sense of urgency and purpose as the non-profit marks its 35th anniversary.
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Swiss company Climeworks pushes the envelope on capture technology.
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Equity, safety concerns emerge as common threads in urban mobility discussions.
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More utilities are 'in the room' with corporate energy planning, and few companies are seeking a 'RExit.'
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And yes, IBM is behind one of them.
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It's a bold move by one of the most aggressive corporate venture capitalists in tech.
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It's time to think more about diversity and social inclusions, from the inside out.
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Plus, four ways cities can collaborate with the corporate sector to set the destination.
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Cargill, General Motors, Kimberly-Clark, Mars and P&G throw their weight behind an effort to take stock of thermal loads.