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Companies v Climate Change

I’m fortunate to be attending ‘Companies v Climate Change’ in Brussels, an event organised to mirror a similar conference run for the first time last year in the USA. It is very interesting to compare and contrast the views and approaches of organisations in different countries in a range of regulatory regimes. One of the most impressive features of the event is the openness of the speakers; none of the all-too-common slick marketing promo content but instead real insights and learnings. The organisers have managed, across an ocean, to assemble a speaker line-up from some large and influential European companies covering a whole range of sectors including retail, food & beverage, chemicals, heavy manufacturing and others. And all that is set in midst of a beautiful and historic city. Highly recommended and the good news is that the organiser is planning on repeating the conference in 2018.

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The future of food
International Relations

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Ethical Corp newsfeed

  • Society Watch: Drive to make ecocide an international crime gains momentum

    Ecocide is an emotive word. First used to describe the human and environmental devastation caused by the use of the defoliant Agent Orange during the Vietnam War, it became the subject of regular discussions at the United Nations throughout the 1970s. In 1998, the destruction of the environment was proposed as an international crime against peace, but ultimately wasn’t adopted as part of the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) Rome Statute, which includes genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and the crime of aggression.Image: Channels: Climate and EnergyNatural CapitalTags: Stop ecocide internationalInternational Criminal CourtRome statuteEU Environmental Crime Directive

GreenBiz newsfeed

  • Building the Circular Buildings Revolution
    on April 20, 2023 at 7:15 am

    Join GreenBiz for our conversation covering the approaches building product manufacturers are using to make products more circular and keep materials in play after their first use. The idea of buildings as material banks is not new, but deserves examination as it hasn’t taken hold at the scale we would expect.

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