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The stock market may not have priced in potential disruptions from Trump's policies yet
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China tech stocks cap best winning run in five years on earnings surprises, fund rotation
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Tapestry Stock Looks Strong After Shoe Sale. Coach Bags Are Still Popular.
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Electric transport groups urge EU not to ease CO2 emission rules
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‘We’re in This for the Long Game.’ How the 100 Most Sustainable Companies Are Handling Anti-ESG Campaigns.
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Analysis-China regulatory easing hopes brighten outlook for offshore equity fundraising
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Moody's cuts Nissan rating to junk status, keeps negative outlook
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Tokyo inflation likely eased in Feb on govt steps amid inflation pressure: Reuters Poll
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StanChart shares hit near decade peak after profit rise, $1.5 billion buyback
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Dow falls nearly 750 points and US stocks tumble as businesses and consumers worry about tariffs
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US stocks tumble as companies and consumers worry about tariffs and Washington. Dow falls nearly 750
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Exclusive-Abrdn to launch China asset management venture with Citic unit, sources say
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CATL, Volkswagen to Collaborate on EV Batteries Amid Intensifying Competition
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Posco Shares Surge After Korea Looks at Anti-Dumping Duties on Chinese Steel
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Global equities mixed, oil drops on uncertainty about Trump moves, geopolitics
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Frozen US aid hits the Amazon forest
Peruvian Indigenous leader Francisco Hernández Cayetano travelled hundreds of miles along the Amazon River basin this month to tell communities working for a decade on a project to protect the forest there was no money left. Source: Context News The initiative is one of hundreds of conservation projects put in limbo by a January 20 executive order signed by US President Donald Trump that froze billions of dollars in foreign aid for 90 days. “There is a tremendous question mark in every community. We are giving free rein to illegal loggers, to coca plant growers,” said Cayetano, president of the Federation of Ticuna and Yagua Communities of the Lower Amazon river. Peru and Colombia are the world’s biggest producers of coca, the raw ingredient for cocaine. Clearing trees to make way for coca fields is a key driver of Amazon forest destruction. Indigenous groups fear their nature and sustainable business projects will end for good as the US Agency for International Development (USAID) is gutted, raising concerns for hard-fought conservation gains and Indigenous governance. The USAID-funded project enabled the Ticuna and Yagua communities to respond to satellite-generated deforestation alerts through an app and so helped the longstanding US goal of fighting cocaine production and trafficking in Latin America. Research published in 2021 in the PNAS journal suggested the initiative had succeeded in stemming deforestation, leading to an estimated 37% reduction in tree cover loss in two years compared to areas not covered by the project. A US judge on February 13 ordered the government to restore payments to foreign aid partners, but it is still not clear whether the Trump administration will comply and for how long. Tasked with the mission of slimming down the government, Trump’s billionaire ally Elon Musk, has criticised USAID and said it was “time for it to die”. Even if funds and jobs are restored and protected by courts, damage has already been done, said an USAID employee who did not wish to have their name disclosed for fear of reprisals. “People are returning to the USA from missions, data and archives have been deleted, so much aid has been lost already,” they said. As Ticuna and Yagua forest protectors returned the smartphones used to track deforestation in Peru’s Amazon, Cayetano told them the local USAID-funded projects should be on hold for at least two or three months. Near Peru’s border with Colombia and Brazil, the agency had also been funding initiatives to substitute coca crops with cacao trees. Earlier this month, gold prices reached a record high, adding to pressure facing the Amazon from illegal gold mining, deeply connected with drug trafficking in the region. Colombia and Peru are the world’s largest cocaine producers, data from the United Nations Office on Drug and Crime (UNODC) shows, and US government data shows they are also South America’s top recipients of USAID funds, largely linked to Washington’s efforts to tackle drugs trafficking. Conservation and humanitarian activities supported by USAID in the region were aligned with U.S. interests to stem the flow of cocaine to its citizens, said Ricardo Soberón, former head of Peru’s DEVIDA drug policy agency. Soberón said that on their own, efforts to investigate drug cartels and destroy coca crops, also supported by the United States, had not succeeded as planters “immediately get new seeds and move deeper into the forests”. The problem with such measures, he said, is that alone they do not “attack the socio-economic causes that give origin to deforestation” for coca leaf production. In 2024, Brazil, home to about 60% of the Amazon forest, was assigned $15 million from USAID funds for environmental initiatives such as training fire brigades, promoting sustainable businesses and strengthening Amazon organisations. The Roraima Indigenous Council, for example, supports about 65,000 Indigenous people in the northern Amazon, and was planning to use USAID funds to structure 18 sustainable business projects, such as fish farming and production of folk crafts. Its coordinator Edinho Macuxi said the institution was now looking for ways to pay its personnel, and that without strengthening communities to protect their lands the cli-mate crisis would accelerate. “With all that’s been happening these days – climate change, floods, hot sun, diseases – it isn’t only Indigenous people that are going to die,” he said. Brent Sohngen, environmental and resource economics professor at Ohio State University, said one example of a successful USAID-funded partnership had been establishing a sustainable timber business in Guatemala’s Maya forest. According to Sohngen, who co-authored two papers on the initiative, it helped protect both nature and the pre-Columbian ruins under the forest. He said fostering sustainable businesses enabled communities to thrive where they live, and so helped stem the flow of migrants to the United States, one of USAID’s goals and a priority of the Trump administration.
Kategorien: Forest Products Industry
World first fire-retardant water-resistant plywood
Premier Forest Products has launched the world’s first fire-retardant and water-resistant plywood, DryGuard FR. Source: Timberbiz Following feedback from its customers, the unique plywood has been developed using groundbreaking technology pioneered by leading European manufacturer, Paged. DryGuard FR is the world’s only plywood that combines advanced water and fire protection, and it’s exclusive to Premier Forest. Building on the success of Premier Forest’s first DryGuard water resistant plywood product launch in 2021, this fire-retardant upgrade is durable and safe, with low formaldehyde and VOC emissions; it has a Type III Environmental Product Declaration (EPD). For use in roofs, floors and walls, the plywood is treated with a REACH compliant hydrophobic coating to reduce rainwater absorption, while still allowing the building to breathe, preventing damp and mould and creating safer health conditions. By repelling water, DryGuard FR retains its structural integrity, so the risk of remedial work is reduced, saving contractors time, money and effort. In addition, there is no need to cover the plywood during build, again increasing efficiency on site. Robust and versatile, the applications for DryGuard FR in the built environment are broad and varied, including commercial, residential, education, leisure and public sector buildings, airports, train stations and even server rooms. DryGuard FR has been rigorously tested and is compliant with the relevant EN standards, is CE2+ certified and FSC certified (FSC-C020012). “We are incredibly proud to launch this world-exclusive product that I am confident will be revolutionary in the timber industry. DryGuard FR will provide customers with the peace of mind of fire retardancy for their building, while increasing productivity and efficiency on site with an all-weather product,” James Pickford, Commercial Director (Panel Products) at Premier Forest Products, said. “We’ve listened to our customers and together with Paged, we’ve been able to create something one-of-a-kind to address their needs.”
Kategorien: Forest Products Industry
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