Search Results for: united nations
10 results out of 4207 results found for 'united nations'.
LATEST CPI LOOKS AT IMPACT OF WAR ON CORRUPTION
Transparency International warned that “conflict creates opportunities for corruption and subverts governments’ efforts to stop it” in unveiling the 2022 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) on January 31, scoring 180 countries worldwide on perceived levels of public sector corruption from 0 (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean).…
UK FRAUD VALUE UP 151% IN A YEAR, LATEST SURVEY FINDS
The combined value of major fraud cases over GBP100,000 (USD120,428) tried in United Kingdom Crown Courts rose 151% in a year from GBP444.7 million (USD535.49 million) in 2021 to GBP1.12 billion (USD1.35 billion) in 2022, returning to pre-pandemic levels, according to the February 17 KPMG Fraud Barometer (1).…
UK PAYS EU EUR2.6 BILLION FOR PRE-BREXIT VAT FRAUD FAILINGS
THE UK government has paid the European Union (EU) EUR2.6 billion (USD2.77 billion or GBP2.31 billion) to cover pre-Brexit losses on customs and VAT fraud between 2011 and 2017 that it failed to stop, meaning it underpaid contributions to the bloc’s budget.…
LATEST CPI SHOWS LINKS BETWEEN CONFLICT AND CORRUPTION
Transparency International (TI) has warned that “conflict creates opportunities for corruption and subverts governments’ efforts to stop it” when unveiling its 2022 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) on January 31, scoring 180 countries worldwide on perceived levels of public sector corruption from 0 (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean) with the average 43.…
BIOMASS UNDER THREAT FROM EU PROPOSAL
Biomass is under threat as the leading source of renewable energy in the European Union (EU) under controversial proposals to cap use of primary woody biomass and end subsidies by the end of 2026. Bioenergy Europe figures (1) show that 69.6% of biomass energy feedstock used in Europe comes from woody biomass, which are forestry and wood industry residues with the remaining feedstock sourced 18.3% from agricultural biomass and 12.1% biowaste.…
CARIBBEAN ISLANDS HARNESS PLENTIFUL SOLAR POWER TO CUT ELECTRICITY COSTS AND BOOST ENERGY INDEPENDENCE
Caribbean island states are looking to harness their natural advantage in bounteous sunlight to expand solar power, boosting their energy independence, while reducing the cost of energy as gas and oil prices rise. Even in oil and gas-rich Trinidad & Tobago, consumers have been feeling the energy pinch, facing increases in their electricity bills in 2023.…
USA NUCLEAR INDUSTRY IS BETTING ON SMALLER REACTORS
With the USA looking to replace fossil fuel consumption in its energy sector, its nuclear industry has “no appetite” for building traditional large-scale nuclear reactors…because of the delays and the cost overruns on such mega projects, said Jacopo Buongiorno, a nuclear energy expert at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).…
ISSB APPROVES FIRST FINAL STANDARD TEXTS AS IT DEVELOPS INTO FULLY-FLEDGED GLOBAL SUSTAINABILITY REPORTING BODY
The chair of the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) on Friday (Feb 17) announced that it had approved the final versions of its first two standards: IFRS S1 General Requirements for Disclosure of Sustainability-related Financial Information and IFRS S2 Climate-related Disclosures will now be released by the end of Q2 2023, with a January 1, 2024 effective date said ISSB chair Emmanuel Faber.…
SOMALI EXPAT ACADEMICS RETURN TO SOMALIA FOR UNIVERSITY JOBS – BUT FOR LOVE OF COUNTRY, NOT MONEYSOMALI EXPAT ACADEMICS RETURN TO SOMALIA FOR UNIVERSITY JOBS – BUT FOR LOVE OF COUNTRY, NOT MONEY
A desire to contribute to nation-building and improve standards of universities within Somalia is luring Somali intellectuals to return home to work in academia.
Professor Abdullahi Barise, the founding president of the City University of Mogadishu, said his institutions and others were welcoming this increasing number of foreign-educated Somalia lecturers and professors.…
TURKISH TOBACCO LEAF PRODUCERS FACE ECONOMIC AND CLIMATE CHALLENGES – BUT PROTECTIONISM MAY HELP THEM SURVIVE
Turkey is the world’s largest Oriental tobacco leaf producer, but harvests have been impacted over the past two years by unusually hot summers and drought. Ranking 15th in tobacco production worldwide, according to the Izmir-based Aegean Tobacco Exporters’ Association (ATEA), the 2022 tobacco crop is expected to be like 2021.…