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Regenvanu said there was an urgent need for a response to climate change that was rooted in international law rather than politics. Mario Tama / Getty Images filesWhile advisory opinions from the International Court of Justice or World Court are not binding, they are legally and politically significant. Experts say the court’s eventual opinion on climate change will probably be cited in climate change-driven lawsuits in courts from Europe to Latin America and beyond. “As judges of the World Court, you possess the power ... to help us course correct and renew hope in humanity’s ability to address the greatest challenge of our time,” she said. Earlier on Monday, Germany also argued that the obligations of states with regard to climate change were established in the Paris climate agreement.
Persons: , ” Ralph Regenvanu, Regenvanu, , Mario Tama, Cynthia Houniuhi, Prince Jalawi Turki al Saud Organizations: Vanuatu, Monday, United Nations, International Court of Justice, Nations Locations: HAGUE, Netherlands, Vanuatu, Port Vila, Europe, Latin America, Solomon Islands, Saudi Arabia, Saudi, Germany, Paris, China, United States
"Realistic" green transition standards will benefit the U.S. energy industry, the CEO of the world's largest oil producer said Tuesday, as the White House prepares to welcome President-elect Donald Trump in January. That's why, you know, I think it's always good for the industry in the U.S. to have more realistic standards for them to achieve their goals." He was speaking at a panel moderated by CNBC's Dan Murphy during the Saudi Green Initiative Forum in Riyadh. Scope 1 and 2 emissions cover direct and indirect emissions from sources that a company owns and controls or from its purchases and uses. Trump has meanwhile previously denounced hydrogen-fueled vehicles, claiming they "tend to blow up."
Persons: Donald Trump, Amin Nasser, CNBC's Dan Murphy, , Riyadh's, Nasser, Trump Organizations: White, Saudi Green Initiative, Aramco —, Saudi Locations: U.S, Saudi, Riyadh, OPEC, Aramco
The Biden administration expanded its efforts to lock in its climate policies on Monday, saying that it would lend almost $7 billion to help build battery factories in Indiana to supply vehicles made by Stellantis, the owner of Jeep, Chrysler, Dodge and Ram. The financing, which was the second multibillion-dollar loan related to electric-vehicle manufacturing in a week, is part of the administration’s efforts to create domestic supplies of batteries. President-elect Donald J. Trump has vowed to reverse Biden administration policies aimed at promoting electric-vehicle manufacturing. Last week, the Department of Energy said it would lend $6 billion to help Rivian build an electric-car factory in Georgia. Rivian, a relatively new company that makes only electric vehicles, plans to produce sport utility vehicles and hatchbacks at the factory, in Social Circle, near Atlanta.
Persons: Biden, Stellantis, Ram, Donald J, Trump Organizations: Chrysler, Dodge, Transportation, Department of Energy Locations: Indiana, United States, Georgia, Atlanta
The International Court of Justice will begin hearing arguments on Monday in a major case on how international laws can be used to protect the climate as global warming accelerates. It is the first time that the court, which is the United Nations’ highest judicial body, has taken up the climate issue, and a key issue at play is whether big polluters can be sued for failing to slow down climate change. The court, a 15-judge body in The Hague that deals with disputes among nations, is holding the hearings over the next two weeks in response to a request submitted last year by the United Nations General Assembly. The General Assembly asked the court to give its opinion on two questions: What obligations do governments have under international law to protect the Earth’s climate system from greenhouse gases? The climate crisis has long been the subject of warnings from scientists and three decades of global negotiations to reduce harmful emissions, and the hearings follow on the heels of the latest United Nations climate summit, known as COP 29.
Organizations: Court, Justice, United Nations, United Nations General Assembly Locations: The Hague, Nations
The latest generation of large language models requires significantly more computing power and energy than previous AI models. As a result, tech leaders are rallying to accelerate the energy transition, including investing in alternatives like nuclear energy. Major tech companies, including Amazon, Google, and Microsoft, have also struck deals with nuclear energy suppliers recently as they advance AI technology. Related storiesMoving to nuclear energyMany tech leaders argue the need for energy solutions is urgent and investing in nuclear energy. AI's energy use is growingTech companies seek new energy solutions because their AI models consume much energy.
Persons: Fabrice Beaulieu, Mark Zuckerberg, Nvidia, Blackwell, Hopper, Jensen Huang, Huang, Sam Altman, Altman, Joe Biden, Cameron Porter, Porter, Trump, OpenAI's GPT Organizations: Tech, Fabrice Beaulieu Big Tech, Meta, Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Nvidia, Hong Kong University of Science, Technology, Economic, Helion Energy, Steel Atlas, McKinsey Locations: Davos, Oklo
CNN —In a world where the climate is increasingly hot and volatile, farmers are having trouble keeping their crops cool. A startup founded in the desert of Saudi Arabia thinks it might have a solution. Heat peaks can desiccate crops, killing them outright if unmitigated, or stressing crops, leaving them more vulnerable to pests and disease. A prototype farm in Bada, Saudi Arabia, uses SecondSky in polyethylene greenhouse covers manufactured by SABIC. Desertification is a pressing issue and will be the focus of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification’s COP16 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in December, as leaders seek to curtail an accelerating problem.
Persons: Derya Baran, John Keppler, , Mark Tester, Ryan Lefers, Iyris, Keppler, Armando Alvarez, Vincent Martin, SecondSky, Martin Organizations: CNN, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, United Arab, Innovation, UN Food and Agriculture Organization, National Food Production Initiative, Sea, SABIC, Sea Global, UN Convention, United Nations Locations: Saudi Arabia, Iyris, KAUST, Egypt, United Arab Emirates, Latin America, Mexico, Europe, South Africa, Morocco, Spain, Bada, Bada , Saudi Arabia, Riyadh
Gavin Newsom plans to revive California's EV rebate if Trump ends the federal tax credit. Tesla sales in California, the US's largest EV market, have recently declined even as overall EV sales in the state have grown. Elon Musk, who has expressed support for ending the federal tax credit, said in an X post it was "insane" for the California proposal exclude Tesla. The federal electric vehicle tax credit, which was passed as part of the Biden administration's Inflation Reduction Act in 2022, provides a $7,500 tax credit to some EV buyers. The Tesla CEO said on an earnings call in July that ending the federal tax credit might actually benefit the company.
Persons: Gavin Newsom, Tesla, Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Newsom, Trump, He's, Musk, Graham Rapier, Organizations: Trump, California Gov, Trump Administration, Reduction Fund, Bloomberg News, Business, Car Dealers, EV, Hyundai, BMW, Biden, Department of Government Locations: California, Trump's
Boggs, founder and CEO of D&S Executive Career Management, once had a candidate interviewing for a vice president-level role. Stories of job-seekers making progress on their search, only to have the rug pulled out from under them later in the hiring process, have become all too common. A majority of job-seekers say they've experienced "love-bombing" or been ghosted during the interview process for a new role, according to a recent survey of 2,900 global employees by Greenhouse, the hiring platform. A similar share, 52%, say they've been ghosted in the hiring process, or had initial conversations, and in some cases made it to final rounds of interviews, only to never hear back from the recruiter or hiring manager about a decision. "Because of that, it's leaving people in a really confusing spot and giving folks anxiety and questioning, frankly, their career and their sanity."
Persons: Debra Boggs, Boggs, He'd, they've, Terry Petzold, Petzold, it's Organizations: Management, CNBC, Greenhouse, Fox Search Group
When COP29 President Mukhtar Babayev stepped to the podium at the closing meeting of the Baku climate summit on Sunday morning, hoping to clinch a hard-fought agreement on global climate finance, he carried with him two speeches. Expectations for a deal were depressed by worries of a looming U.S. withdrawal from global climate cooperation, geopolitical turmoil, and a rise of isolationist politics that had shunted climate change off much of the world’s top priorities list. An activist holds a globe balloon during a protest at the COP29 United Nations climate change conference, in Baku, Azerbaijan, on Nov. 21. That made getting a bigger climate finance number hard, observers to the talks said. “Even maintaining climate finance at current levels in the current political environment is a huge fight,” said Joe Thwaites, senior advocate on international climate finance at the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental group.
Persons: Mukhtar Babayev, , Babayev, Maxim Shemetov, , Eliot Whittington, Jiwoh Abdulai, Donald Trump, , Dion George, Trump, Joe Thwaites, ” Tina Stege, Chandni Raina, Oscar Sorria Organizations: Reuters, COP29, Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership, Sierra Leone Environment, Trump, United, African Environment, Natural Resources Defense Council, Marshall, Babayev, COP30, Initiative Locations: Baku, Azerbaijan, U.S, Nations, Brazil, Belem —, Sierra Leone, United States, Paris, Ukraine, Belem
Gavin Newsom said the state will provide rebates to residents if President-elect Donald Trump's incoming administration does away with a federal tax credit for electric vehicles. "We will intervene if the Trump Administration eliminates the federal tax credit, doubling down on our commitment to clean air and green jobs in California," Newsom said. The federal rebates on new and used electric vehicles were implemented in the Inflation Reduction Act that President Joe Biden signed into law in 2022. Those potential changes could limit the federal rebates, including by reducing the amount of money available or limiting who is eligible. This isn't the first time California will be taking action against the Trump's administration concerning clean transportation legislation.
Persons: Gavin Newsom, Donald, Newsom, Joe Biden Organizations: Trump Administration, Ford, General Motors, Trump, Associated Press, Los Angeles Times Locations: California, United States
watch nowThe billionaire Virgin founder Sir Richard Branson said younger generations should feel positive about the future — and that they can "achieve an enormous amount." When asked how he might reassure young people about their future over issues such as climate change, Branson said, "They can achieve an enormous amount, and so I honestly don't think that young people should be down about it. I think we can overcome climate change if we have the … we've got to make sure we have the right politicians at the top," he said. "Our sweet spot is, we work with youth around the world," Rodgers said of the two organizations. Climate change, public health and criminal justice reforms will be a focus, according to an online release.
Persons: Sir Richard Branson, CNBC's Tania Bryer, Branson, we've, Donald Trump's, Trump, , Nile Rodgers, Rodgers, Chic, Marc Grimwade Organizations: Virgin, CNBC, Branson, Advisory Center, Virgin Unite, Virgin Group, Foundation, Rodgers, Wireimage, Getty Locations: Paris, Adelaide, Australia
AI is also ushering in an era of nuclear power, however, which is cleaner. Tech companies are investing in nuclear power plants to fuel AI data centers. Some industry leaders believe that nuclear energy might be the only reliable way to meet the demands of the AI revolution. "AI requires massive, industrial-scale amounts of energy," Franklin Servan-Schreiber, the CEO of nuclear energy startup Transmutex, previously told Business Insider. According to the Financial Times, last week, at the UN COP29 climate summit in Baku, Azerbaijan, Big Tech companies flew under the radar more than usual.
Persons: Fabrice, Franklin Servan, Schreiber, Edwin Lyman, Toby Rice, EQT, Rice, Kevin Thompson, Jensen Huang Organizations: Tech, US Energy Information Administration, Companies, Google, Union of, Scientists, Wall Street, Financial Times, UN, Big Tech, McKinsey, Nvidia, Hong Kong University of Science, Technology Locations: United States, Washington ,, Baku, Azerbaijan
The agreement was criticized by developing nations, who called it insufficient, but United Nations climate chief Simon Steill hailed it as an insurance policy for humanity. It also laid bare divisions between wealthy governments constrained by tight domestic budgets and developing nations reeling from costs of storms, floods and droughts. Delegates applaud during a closing plenary meeting at the COP29 United Nations Climate Change Conference, in Baku, Azerbaijan on Nov. 24, 2024. Donald Trump’s victory this month has raised doubts among some negotiators that the world’s largest economy would pay into any climate finance goal agreed in Baku. The showdown over financing for developing countries comes in a year that scientists say is destined to be the hottest on record.
Persons: Simon Steill, we’ve, ” Steill, Murad Sezer, Donald Trump’s Organizations: Nations, COP29 United, Change, Republican Locations: BAKU, Baku, Azerbaijan, Paris, U.S, Canada, China, Baku . Trump, Ukraine, Africa, Asia, South America, Valencia, Spain
Tucked away in the frigid northern corner of Siberia are giant craters, some deep enough to fit a 15-story building. It's been fairly clear from the beginning that the craters are caused by some type of explosion deep underground. Researchers widely agreed that when these hydrates are damaged, they release methane gas, which is what's triggering the explosions in Siberia. AdvertisementMore exploding craters to comeSiberia will likely have more explosive craters in the coming years as global temperatures continue to warm. It's unclear exactly how much methane these explosions release, but in the grand scheme of climate change, they're a small matter.
Persons: It's, Ana Morgado, Morgado, Madeline Reinsel, Osomis Organizations: University of Cambridge, Business Locations: Siberia, Russia, Manhattan, Canada, It's
If confirmed by the Senate, three key nominees would largely be responsible for executing Trump's "drill, baby, drill" agenda across the federal government. The Interior Department leases millions of acres of public lands and waters for oil and gas drilling. The oil and gas industry is pushing the Trump administration to issue a new five-year offshore-leasing program. Woods of ExxonMobil told Semafor last week that the Trump administration should keep regulations to curb methane emissions from oil and gas infrastructure. But Trump attacked electric vehicles on the campaign trail, adopting the oil and gas lobby's messaging.
Persons: Donald Trump, Doug Burgum, Chris Wright, Trump, Lee Zeldin, Trump's, Karoline Leavitt, Vance, Wright, Biden, Amanda Eversole, Kenny Stein, Darren Woods, Stein, It's, Woods, Semafor, David Brown, Wood Mackenzie Organizations: Interior, Energy, Senate, Trump, Interior Department, Liberty Energy, Environmental Protection Agency, National Energy Council, Truth, Energy Department, Republicans, of, American Petroleum Institute, American Energy Alliance, CNBC, EPA, ExxonMobil, US Locations: Gulf of Mexico, North Dakota, New York, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Russia, Europe, Gulf, Mexico, Wood
Government crucial to Musk’s net worthIt’s worthwhile to ask just how much of his world-leading net worth comes from government help over the last 10 to 15 years. Tesla and SpaceX got started – and survived their early days – with assistance from state and federal policies, government contracts and loans. Tesla buyers received federal tax credits worth an estimated $3.4 billion before the perk disappeared entirely for Tesla buyers at the end of 2019. “Take away the subsidies, it will only help Tesla,” Musk posted on his social media platform X in July. According to USASpending.gov, the government database that tracks federal spending, SpaceX has signed contracts worth nearly $20 billion.
Persons: New York CNN — Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Musk, , Daniel Ives, SpaceX doesn’t, Tesla’s, Noah Berger, Tesla, Trump, ” Musk, Elon Musk, Frederic J . Brown, Ives, Brandon Bell, USASpending.gov, Casey Dreier, ” Dreier, “ Elon, Dreier, CNN’s Jackie Wattles Organizations: New, New York CNN, SpaceX, Trump, Government, Wedbush Securities, Reuters, Department of Energy, Biden, US, Tesla, Getty, NASA, International Space, Planetary Society Locations: New York, Fremont , California, Hawthorne , California, AFP, Brownsville , Texas, Russia
8 6 United States 4 2 European Union 1850 1900 1950 2000 2024 China Emissions per year 10 gigatons CO2-eq. 8 6 United States 4 2 European Union 1850 1900 1950 2000 2024 China Emissions per year 10 gigatons CO2-eq. That’s why historical emissions are often used as a gauge of responsibility for global warming. A question of moneyChina’s historical responsibility for climate change has become a major point of contention in global climate politics. Total historical greenhouse gas emissions Historical emissions per person Gigatons CO2-eq.
Persons: Jones, ” John Podesta, Ding Xuexiang, , Gaston Browne of Organizations: United, United States, Carbon, European Union, Union, Indonesia, India, Britain, Canada, Qatar Locations: United States, Europe, China, United Nations, Baku, Azerbaijan, Japan, Canada, Australia, Nations, India, Saudi Arabia, Africa, , Gaston Browne of Antigua, Barbuda, Russia, Brazil, European Union, Qatar
Stross is the president and co-founder of Greenhouse, the hiring platform, and has seen a lot of tech and AI advancements in hiring since his business launched in 2012. And so you feel pressure that if you're not applying to tons of jobs, you're falling behind." New tech can enable bad hiring practicesAnother issue is that businesses are leveraging hiring tech to post more job openings, even if they're not for roles they're actively hiring for. Another strategy: Reach out to first- or second-degree LinkedIn connections at companies you're actively applying to. Hiring tech can limit bad actors and highlight positive experiences
Persons: Jon Stross, he's, isn't, Stross, Greenhouse, they're Organizations: Greenhouse, CNBC
Empty lot Grand Ave. Dean St. Project site Pacific St. The Upper West Side project was recommended for approval while the Crown Heights project wasn’t. The Upper West Side project was recommended for approval while the Crown Heights project wasn’t. The Upper West Side project was recommended for approval while the Crown Heights project wasn’t. City Council vote Here’s where things ended for the Crown Heights project, which was rejected by the council member from the area.
Persons: Nadine Oelsner, Dean St, Aviles, Booker T, Booker, Oelsner, It’s, Crystal Hudson, Oelsner’s, Hudson, Mark Levine Organizations: New York, West, Street Manhattan Queens, Street Brooklyn Staten, Street Brooklyn, . Census, Crown, Census, 108th, Google, West Side Federation for Senior, 109th St, St, Washington, Washington Middle School, Washington Middle, Side Federation for Senior, Budget Commission, Manufacturing, Fulton St, Vanderbilt, ., Plaza Manufacturing, Army Plaza Lafayette, Army Plaza Lafayette Ave . Manufacturing, , New York City Department of City Planning, Riverside Park, Broadway, St ., St . West 108th St, , New York City Department of, HSN, Pontiac, West Side, West Side Federation, City Planning Department Locations: New, United States, Crown Heights, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Westchester County, Long, New York City, Street Brooklyn Staten, Prospect, Crown, U.S, Park, Riverside, Phoenix, Atlanta, City, St, Fulton, Ave, Vanderbilt Ave, Franklin, Army Plaza Lafayette Ave, , New, St . West, Amsterdam, Heights
Tech jobs are mired in a recession
  + stars: | 2024-11-18 | by ( Aki Ito | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +9 min
But ask white-collar professionals who are actually looking for a job, and they'll tell you horror stories that are eerily similar to Bach's. As I wrote last spring, that's because the job market has essentially split into two distinct tiers. AdvertisementNow, new data from LinkedIn — which tracked how often its users landed new jobs — shows which white-collar jobs are being hit the hardest. AdvertisementAnother reason tech companies are hiring fewer professionals is that their existing employees are opting to stay put. "We're slowly, slowly recovering," says Art Zeile, the CEO of Dice, a tech job board.
Persons: Jon Bach, Bach, I've, that's, Kory Kantenga, , they'd, Jenny Diani, Jon Stross, Santiago Rodriguez, it's, we're, We're, Zeile, Dice, Aki Ito Organizations: eBay, LinkedIn, Autodesk, Google, Business Locations: coders, Silicon Valley
Beneath the snowy slopes lay a prehistoric surprise: an ecosystem that predates the dinosaurs, revealed by melting snow before being stumbled upon by a hiker in the Italian Alps. Intrigued, she snapped photos and shared them with her friend, Elio Della Ferrera, a nature photographer. Della Ferrera then contacted Dal Sasso, at the museum in Milan, to learn more about the discovery. These environmental shifts contributed to the extinction of many species, which we may now encounter as fossils on a fortunate hike. “The past has much to teach us about what we risk doing to the world today,” the researchers warned.
Persons: , Cristiano Dal Sasso, Elio Della Ferrera, Milano Claudia Steffensen, ” Steffensen, Della Ferrera, Dal Sasso, Ausonio, Lorenzo Marchetti, Marchetti, Ronchi, Fabio Manucci, ” Ronchi Organizations: Guardian, University of Pavia, NBC, Milano Locations: Italian, Milan, Italy's Lombardy, Northern Italy, Berlin, Southern
U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm speaks to the media on day five at the UNFCCC COP29 Climate Conference on November 15, 2024 in Baku, Azerbaijan. A potential decision by Donald Trump to walk back the Biden administration's climate-geared projects would impact jobs in areas governed by the President-elect's own party, outgoing U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm told CNBC, urging consistency in Washington's green transition policies. "We are now building all of these projects. We're building batteries for electric vehicles, we're building the vehicles, we're building the offshore wind turbines, we're building the solar panels. When asked for a response on Granholm's comments, Karoline Leavitt, a spokeswoman for Trump's transition team, said the president-elect will "deliver" on the promises he made on the campaign trail.
Persons: Energy Jennifer Granholm, Donald Trump, Jennifer Granholm, Trump's, Granholm, CNBC's Dan Murphy, Joe Biden's, Law —, Karoline Leavitt Organizations: Energy, Conference, Biden, U.S . Energy, CNBC, Law, Republican Locations: Baku, Azerbaijan, Paris, U.S, Washington
Burgers at McDonald's could soon involve fewer greenhouse gas emissions thanks to a new cattle feed. Sign up for our newsletter to get the latest on the culture & business of sustainability — delivered weekly to your inbox. McDonald's is working with seed company Syngenta and Lopez Foods, one of McDonald's meat suppliers, to feed cattle Syngenta's Enogen corn, the companies said in a statement on Thursday. Related Video How McDonald's is using data and its loyalty program to make new promotions like the adult Happy MealThat easy digestibility could mean fewer greenhouse gases, which contribute to global warming. McDonald's global sales were down during the company's third quarter as many consumers saved money by eating at home.
Persons: chow, Syngenta, Lopez, Enogen, McDonald's, It's, McDonald's Kendra Levine Organizations: Service, Mac, Lopez Foods, Environmental Protection Agency, Sustainability, McDonald's Locations: McDonald's
AdvertisementPresident-elect Donald Trump has long questioned the reality of the climate crisis, describing it as a "scam" and accusing policies to tackle the crisis of destroying US jobs. AdvertisementChina, as part of its "Belt and Road" initiative to grow its global influence, has provided developing countries with renewable energy technologies, including wind farms. AdvertisementThe US lags China as a clean tech economic power. There are also doubts over how much China is willing to take an international leadership role on climate issues. Assuming a leadership role would likely require China to send money to other countries, said Crowther.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Herbert Crowther, we're, Lily McElwee, Xi Jinping, Trump, Daniel Araya, Biden, Joe Biden's, Crowther, Xi Organizations: Service, Eurasia Group, Business, Biden, China Studies, Center for Strategic, International Studies, Trump, Getty, Brookings Institute, International Energy Agency, Reuters Locations: Paris, China, New York, Baku, Azerbaijan, Washington ,, Beijing, United States, Gansu Province, Washington , DC, Brazil
After a campaign featuring promises to slash landmark climate legislation, and a first term record that included pulling the U.S. out of the Paris climate agreement, President-elect Donald Trump's win casts a shadow of doubt over the world of global climate policy. As an isolationist, Trump-led American foreign policy cedes global leadership on the issue, an increasingly willing China can assume the spot instead. Ceding global climate leadership to China "would be a mistake"China is looking to "play a more proactive role internationally on climate change," said Joanna Lewis, an associate professor at Georgetown University and expert in international climate policy. But "it would be a mistake for the United States to completely cede not just [its] leadership role on climate change. But the development of low carbon technologies, that's really the area that has been particularly competitive between China and the United States," said Lewis.
Persons: Donald Trump, Xi Jinping, Donald Trump's, Trump, Joanna Lewis, Lewis, Joe Biden Organizations: European Union, Republicans, United Nations, BMO Capital Markets, Georgetown University Locations: Osaka, Japan, Paris, China, United States
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