Corporate Purpose in a Post-Election US: A Call for Continued Leadership
As I reflect on our latest research in the wake of the 2024 presidential election, one thing is abundantly clear: The US public is not backing away from their expectations of
As I reflect on our latest research in the wake of the 2024 presidential election, one thing is abundantly clear: The US public is not backing away from their expectations of
A new prototype device demonstrates an innovative approach to producing ammonia — a key component of fertilizer — that could transform an industry responsible for about one-third of global greenhouse gas
As the global climate crisis intensifies, the demands for innovative and scalable solutions grow increasingly urgent. In a recent article published in Frontiers in Energy, Nobel laureate Dr. Steven Chu, from
More Californians than ever recognize that global climate change is driven by human activities. But while awareness of climate change’s causes has grown among the state’s residents, most have yet to
Cast your mind back to 2015 — specifically, the UN Climate Change Conference (COP21) hosted in Paris that December. The event marked a watershed moment for businesses — kickstarting a tidal
Welcome to Carbon Brief’s DeBriefed. An essential guide to the week’s key developments relating to climate…
The post DeBriefed 3 January 2025: ‘Decade of deadly heat’; Russian gas cut off;
Ports including in Saudi Arabia and the US projected to be seriously damaged by a metre of sea level riseRising sea levels driven by the climate crisis will overwhelm many of
Sediments are more than just layers of mud on the ground. They can reveal a wealth of information about landscapes from millions of years ago right up to the present day.
African countries collectively have emitted very little of the greenhouse gases that have caused climate change, but are badly affected by climate-induced floods, droughts and heat waves. To withstand some of
Increasingly frequent and severe wildfires have become a yearly concern for many Arctic communities, and a chapter of a new U.S. report involving one Canadian university—Université de Montréal—suggests that they are