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Search Results for: Climate change

10 results out of 4040 results found for 'Climate change'.

HIGHER EDUCATION SHOULD EMBRACE NEW AI TECH, INNOVATION CONFERENCE TOLD



Higher education should embrace rather than shun artificial intelligence and related modern technologies, such as the increasingly ubiquitous AI apps ChatGPT and GPT-4, this year’s ASU+GSV Summit, staged in San Diego, heard yesterday. (Monday, April 17).

Assessing the fast-changing technological landscape and its impact on higher education, Dan Schwartz, dean of the Stanford Graduate School of Education, in the USA, commented: “We need to be able to navigate the future and future is changing.”…

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ISSB PUSHES FOR ITS STANDARDS TO BE SUSTAINABILITY REPORTING GLOBAL BASELINE

An International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) symposium in Montréal, Canada, has heard how accounting standards experts are striving to build a “global baseline” of regulation based on ISSB standards, despite the contrasting guidance being developed worldwide. 

Speaking at the event on Friday (Feb 17), Mark Carney, UN special envoy for climate action and finance, and former central bank governor for the UK and Canada, said of the baseline: “It’s critical. You need compatible information.”  

Mr Carney stressed ongoing discussions between the ISSB and major jurisdictions, such as the EU (European Union), the USA and Japan, about the need for regulatory harmony.

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PUBLIC SPENDING ON AML GROWS, BUT IS IT SPENT WISELY?



The fact that AML/CFT is expensive is widely appreciated by governments and international organisations, but they still support policies and programmes that cost a considerable proportion of the USD274.1 billion that LexisNexis Risk Solutions says is lavished on financial crime compliance (1).…

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AUTOMATED LABELLING PRODUCTION TECHNOLOGY ESSENTIAL, SAY EU AND US EXPERTS



LABEL-MAKING automation is increasingly important to the global packaging industry. Indeed, the Wisconsin, USA-based global identification and compliance solution specialists Brady Corporation calls automated labelling a “must-have” – saying that the question is not if a company will automate its labelling process, but when (1).…

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CYPRUS SEEKS TO SHED REPUTATION AS SUNNY HOME FOR RUSSIAN DIRTY MONEY



Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has given the Cypriot government an additional incentive to remedy its past reputation as a haven for Russian money of questionable provenance. As the war launched by President Vladimir Putin has as of March 27 caused 8,401 civilian casualties, according to UN figures, the internationally recognised government of Cyprus, which still controls just the southern two-thirds of its island (the north being run by the breakaway Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus), has launched some significant AML/CFT reforms.…

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SOUTHERN EUROPE IS HEART OF EUROPEAN DIGITIAL TEXTILE PRINTING EXPANSION



Southern Europe has always been a key region for creative textile and clothing development and so it is no surprise that local companies have been enthusiastic adopters of digital textile printing, given the flexibility, speed and sustainability that these systems offer.…

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DEPOSIT RETURN SYSTEMS KEY TO BOOSTING RECYCABILITY, SAY EUROPEAN CAN EXPERTS



Deposit return systems (DRS) promoted by European Union (EU) regulation are the best way to help EU can manufacturers achieve high recycling and collection of quality materials, EU (European Union) can sector experts told the March 28-30 Packaging Waste and Sustainability Forum, in Brussels.  …

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IRELAND’S HIGH WINDS FUEL EXPANDING RENEWABLES SECTOR – BUT WITH TEETHING TROUBLES



 

The high winds buffeting Ireland, blowing in from the Atlantic Ocean, are providing the island country with a solution to ease its reputation as a laggard in climate action policies required by international agreement and European Union (EU) politics. (1) .…

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BLACK SUB-SAHARAN STUDENTS TRY TO FLEE TUNISIA AFTER WAVE OF MASS ARRESTS AND VIOLENCE



Students from sub-Saharan African countries are warning they are ready to abandon degree courses in Tunisian universities and colleges, fleeing this north African country in the wake of mass arrests of compatriots and racial violence this month.

Christian Kwongang, president of the Tunisian Association of Sub-Saharan Students (Association des Étudiants et Stagiaires Africains en Tunisie – AESAT) said that as of March 7, at least 400 sub-Saharan African students had been arrested in immigration sweeps by police, and there had been more than 30 racially motivated physical attacks by the against black African students over the past year.…

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TUNISIA PRESIDENT OFFERS OLIVE BRANCH OVER BLACK SUB-SAHARAN STUDENTS – BUT REPRESENTATIVES ARE SCEPTICAL



Tunisia’s President Kais Saied seemed to be rolling back on his determination to impose “urgent measures” to reduce what he called the “hordes” of sub-Saharan migrants, but black students say nothing has changed for them. President Saied has offered up the promise of speeding up issuing residency permits known as “cartes sejour” and even waiving the penalties for overstays by sub-Saharan migrant workers and students.…

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