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International

Why energy storage isn’t just about batteries

Why Energy Storage Extends Beyond Batteries

Public debate often associates energy storage with lithium-ion batteries, and understandably so, as these batteries have driven swift progress in grid flexibility, electric vehicles, and decentralized energy systems. However, achieving a full energy transition demands a diversified suite of storage technologies. Distinct storage methods offer different durations, capacities, costs, environmental impacts, and grid-support functions. Viewing storage as a one-technology issue can lead to technical mismatches, economic drawbacks, and lost chances to strengthen resilience.The key capabilities that storage should offerEnergy storage serves more than one purpose. Systems are evaluated based on:Duration: spanning milliseconds to seconds for frequency regulation, minutes to hours…
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Why bad emissions accounting undermines climate action

Flawed Emissions Reporting: Hindering Climate Progress

Accurate emissions accounting is the foundation of effective climate policy, corporate climate strategies, and investor decision-making. When emissions are misstated, omitted, or double-counted, the result is not merely technical error: it warps incentives, delays mitigation, misdirects finance, and erodes public trust. Below I explain how and why poor accounting matters, give concrete examples and data, and outline practical fixes.The role that robust emissions accounting is meant to fulfillGood accounting should reliably measure greenhouse gas (GHG) sources and sinks; assign responsibility across actors and activities; allow tracking of progress against targets; and enable comparable, verifiable claims. That requires three elements working…
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How to tell real sustainability from green marketing

The Truth About Green Marketing: Real vs. Fake Sustainability

Sustainability has shifted from a niche concern to a mainstream priority, prompting real corporate change alongside marketing tactics that portray routine operations as eco‑friendly. Telling the difference between meaningful sustainability efforts and superficial “green marketing,” often referred to as greenwashing, is crucial for consumers, investors, procurement teams, and regulators. This article offers practical benchmarks, illustrative cases, data‑based verification methods, and clear steps to help identify which claims are credible and which are merely promotional.How genuine green marketing differs from greenwashingGreen marketing refers to any message that implies an environmental advantage, while greenwashing arises when such messages distort or exaggerate the…
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The Inevitable Return of Protectionism in Crisis

The Inevitable Return of Protectionism in Crisis

Uncertainty, whether sparked by financial turmoil, pandemics, geopolitical tensions, or abrupt technological shifts, exerts pressures that steer governments and voters toward protectionist measures. Such protectionism emerges from fear, political incentives, and calculated strategy. This article explores the forces that revive protectionism during difficult periods, illustrates them through historical and contemporary examples, analyzes the economic mechanisms and outcomes involved, and presents policy alternatives that can lessen the impulse to withdraw behind trade barriers.Historical trends and recent instancesProtectionism has long been more than a modern curiosity, exemplified by the 1930s Smoot-Hawley tariffs, when the United States raised duties to shield domestic industries,…
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Enfocado

The AI Effect: Reshaping Global Competitive Landscapes

Artificial intelligence has moved far beyond a specialized technical niche, becoming a central strategic force that reshapes economic influence, national defense, corporate competitiveness, and societal trajectories. Entities and countries that command cutting‑edge models, immense datasets, and concentrated computing power acquire disproportionate sway. In the AI age, existing advantages in talent, financial resources, and manufacturing are magnified, while new drivers emerge, including the scale of models, the breadth of data ecosystems, and the stance adopted in regulation.Financial implications and overall market sizeAI is a major growth engine. Estimates vary by methodology, but leading forecasts place the potential global economic impact in…
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Understanding Algorithmic Bias as a Public Policy Threat

Understanding Algorithmic Bias as a Public Policy Threat

Algorithmic systems now make or influence decisions across criminal justice, hiring, healthcare, lending, social media, and public services. When those systems reflect or amplify social biases, they stop being isolated technical problems and become public policy risks that affect civil rights, economic opportunity, public trust, and democratic governance. This article explains how bias arises, documents concrete harms with data and cases, and outlines the policy levers needed to manage the risk at scale.Understanding algorithmic bias and the factors behind its emergenceAlgorithmic bias refers to systematic and repeatable errors in automated decision-making that produce unfair outcomes for particular individuals or groups.…
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How climate action gets financed in vulnerable countries

Climate Action Funding for Vulnerable Nations

Vulnerable countries, which face limited capacity to withstand climate shocks, significant exposure to sea-level rise, droughts, floods or extreme heat, and tight fiscal constraints, need substantial and sustained funding to adapt and shift toward low‑carbon development. In these environments, climate‑action finance originates from various sources, each intended to tackle distinct risks, timelines and project types. The following offers a practical overview of how this financing is organized, the actors involved, the instruments applied, the obstacles frequently encountered, and illustrative examples of effective strategies.The importance of financing and the key aspects it should encompassClimate finance in vulnerable countries must address both…
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Why nuclear energy is back in public debate

Why is Nuclear Energy Being Debated Again?

Nuclear power has once again moved to the forefront of global public and policy discussions, driven by a convergence of factors such as climate commitments, energy security needs, technological progress, market developments, and evolving public sentiment, shifting the conversation from ideological arguments to practical considerations about balancing deep decarbonization with dependable electricity generation.Key drivers behind renewed attentionClimate commitments: Governments and corporations aiming for net-zero emissions by mid-century face the need for large amounts of firm, low-carbon electricity. Nuclear’s near-zero operational CO2 emissions make it a candidate for supplying baseload and flexible power to support electrification of transport, industry, and heating.Energy…
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Why oceans matter for climate and for the economy

Oceans: Key to Climate Action and Economic Development

Oceans serve as the world’s leading force in regulating climateThe global ocean spans about 71% of Earth’s surface and functions as the planet’s chief climate moderator, absorbing and redistributing heat and carbon to soften temperature fluctuations, shape weather systems, and maintain essential life-supporting biogeochemical processes. Two key functions are especially notable.Heat storage: The ocean has absorbed most of the surplus heat generated by greenhouse gas emissions—widely assessed as exceeding 90% of the planet’s accumulated excess warmth—thereby tempering atmospheric temperature rises while introducing long-lasting thermal inertia that commits the climate system to future shifts.Carbon sink: The ocean takes in a substantial…
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What loss and damage means in climate negotiations

What «Loss and Damage» Signifies in Climate Debates

Loss and damage in international climate discussions describes climate‑driven harms that surpass what societies, nations, and individuals can realistically withstand or adapt to. It encompasses both abrupt disasters such as storms, floods, and wildfires, as well as gradual processes like rising sea levels, desertification, and the retreat of glaciers. The idea highlights the lingering consequences left after mitigation and adaptation efforts have been applied, along with the question of who bears responsibility for addressing those enduring effects.Essential measures and core descriptionsEconomic losses: quantifiable monetary setbacks that include damaged infrastructure, ruined harvests, reconstruction outlays, GDP downturns, and disturbances across markets.Non-economic losses:…
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