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Search Results for: Climate change

10 results out of 4041 results found for 'Climate change'.

QUANTUM COMPUTING OFFERS MAJOR EFFICIENCY BENEFITS TO TEXTILE SECTOR, ALONGSIDE SERIOUS CYBER-SECURITY RISKS



INTRODUCTION

 

Quantum computers were once the stuff of science fiction, the technology that was always 10 years away from fruition. But now they are real and operating. Google last October announced it had developed a device of 53-qubits (quantum computers’ ability to express a signal), nicknamed Sycamore, which it claimed in a Nature article [1] took 200 seconds to sample one instance of a quantum circuit a million times, which the IT major claimed would take 10,000 years for a state-of-the-art digital supercomputer to achieve.…

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EU ROUND UP - NEW EU TAX LAW DEMANDS DIGITAL SALES PLATFORMS SHARE TRANSACTION DATA



A MAJOR expansion in collecting sales information within the digital economy across the European Union (EU) and beyond has been proposed by the European Commission, to crack down on widescale tax evasion.

The EU executive has proposed reforms to an EU directive on administrative cooperation between tax authorities (see https://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/sites/taxation/files/2020_tax_package_dac7_en.pdf)…

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ASIA-PACIFIC REGION OFFERS GROWING PROTECTION TO WHISTLEBLOWERS, ALTHOUGH COMPREHENSIVE LAWS ARE USUALLY ABSENT



THE ASIA-Pacific region, even one-party states such as China, have developed legal protections for whistleblowers, although the comprehensive protection more commonly found in Europe is still usually absent.

South Korea is one jurisdiction leading the pack on developing robust whistleblower protections.…

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GROWING RENEWABLE ENERGY SECTOR FEEDS SPECIALIST LUBRICANTS BUSINESS



Enormous forces act on renewable energy system’s mechanical parts when generating power from wind and water. Between the smooth operation and potential loss of multi-million-dollar investments stand gear lubricants. Lubricants are also needed for the hydraulics that pitch the blades a few degrees every time the wind, or the water current, changes. …

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CHINA UNDER INCREASING PRESSURE TO BOOST ML CONTROLS



 

With China turning from capital inflow to outflow amid Chinese companies’ global expansion programs, Chinese financial institutions are facing closer anti-money laundering scrutiny, as they, too, expand globally. Indeed, China’s top five banks had 1, 270 overseas branches at the end of 2017 (according to FATF (the Financial Action Task Force).…

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NEW FATF PRESIDENT WANTS TO EXPAND ORGANISATION’S ENVIRONMENTAL CRIME SCOPE WHILE BEEFING UP ITS AML FINTECH ADVICE



THE NEW president of FATF, who took office on July 1, is planning to expand the global AML’s current focus on wildlife trade offences to other environmental crime, such as illegal logging, slash-and-burn cultivation and unlawful waste disposal.

Speaking to the MLB on July 2 in his first media interview after taking on this new role, Dr Marcus Pleyer, from Germany, stressed that the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has said illicit proceeds from environmental crime could total USD259 billion annually worldwide.…

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FATF CONFIRMS STAY OF BLACKLISTING EXECUTION FOR ERRING AML/CFT JURISDICTIONS BECAUSE OF COVID-19



THE FINANCIAL Action Task Force (FATF) has confirmed high risk AML/CFT jurisdictions on its grey and black-lists have another two months to sort out their AML/CFT weaknesses because of COVID-19 – consideration of further blacklisting and additional measures will be postponed until that deadline.…

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SANCTIONS REGIMES TIGHTEN ON SYRIA AS BLOODY CIVIL WAR CONTINUES



As Syria enters its 10th year of civil conflict, the economy is in tatters, foreign currency is in short supply, and sanctions have not only been renewed, the USA has introduced new secondary sanctions. Illicit crime and sanctions busting abounds.

In May (2020), the USA issued further guidance on Syria, while the European Union (EU) extended its sanctions on Syria for a further year, to 1 June 2021.…

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CANADIAN PARTS MAKERS ANTICIPATE BIG RISE IN ORDERS ONCE IMMINENT USMCA STARTS OPERATING



CANADA’S Automotive Parts Manufacturers’ Association (APMA) is optimistic that the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) will deliver more sustained work to the country’s supply chain once the deal comes into force on July 1. It replaces the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), in place since 1994.…

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UK OVERSEAS TERRITIORIES MOVE SLOWLY TOWARDS CREATION OF PUBLIC UBO REGISTERS



THE UK’s overseas territories are struggling with something of an existential crisis, as they face an effective 2023 deadline for introducing publicly accessible beneficial ownership registers that could undermine their ability to offer confidential financial services to companies and wealthy individuals.…

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