Displaying 1 - 17 of 17
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Sponsored: By following three key steps, businesses can develop goals and follow actions to support the restoration of biodiversity, a move that has benefits for both business and nature.
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Research suggests that a border carbon tax is likely important only for industries such as steel, textiles, mining, cement and chemicals that are carbon-intensive, large contributors to the economy and exposed to international trade.
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Organizations such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Business Roundtable, American Petroleum Institute and others are evolving their public positions on carbon pricing.
by Amy Meyer
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Our demands on nature far exceed its capacity to supply them, putting biodiversity under huge pressure and society at 'extreme risk.'
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The oil and gas giant ramps up its investment in the largest carbon offset developer in the U.S., as it increases focus on natural climate solutions in support of its net-zero targets.
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The industries that make up the zero-emission vehicles sector — infrastructure providers, automakers, mobility startups — are one of the sectors that could gain the most from the Biden win.
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Both parties used to love the idea of carbon pricing. So why are they giving up on it?
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Citing new urgency, CEOs are pushing U.S. lawmakers to come to their side on 'market-based' climate policies including a price on carbon.
by Elsa Wenzel
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Figures from BP, Shell, Unilever, Nestlé and BlackRock are among members of the new Taskforce on Scaling Voluntary Carbon Markets.
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Nuclear plants, CCS and whole-building retrofits should not be prioritized over smaller cheaper alternatives, study argues, while acknowledging small scale technologies do not offer a panacea.
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Deep decarbonization only happens if every polluter pays, not just the environmentally conscious.
by Mark Jaccard
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Policies to promote innovation and prevent pollution can help consumers and move the auto industry towards new progress.
by Dave Cooke
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This system would be burdensome and inefficient but it could make it feasible to practically address carbon leakage.
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When will these near- and zero-emissions (NZ and ZE) technologies become the new norm? All signs point to 2025.
by John Boesel
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This producer is reclaiming value from waste for the voluntary carbon market.
17
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Consider this real-world proof.