Avsnitt
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Across the globe, cities are growing at an unprecedented rate and are now home to the majority of the world’s population. By 2050, it’s estimated that two out of three people worldwide will live in cities.
They are engines of growth, but also fragile places, where the pressures of population density are keenly felt. Global emissions reached an all-time high in 2018, and the air above cities such as Delhi is growing ever more polluted.
The global temperature rise caused by those emissions is also exacerbated in urban areas. City dwellers suffer the dangers of extreme heat, while droughts will become common and sustained as the mercury rises.
Ageing infrastructure is also under pressure from growing population. Transit networks need updating to carry ever greater numbers. Buildings and infrastructure need to be updated and strengthened to withstand the impact of increasingly regular extreme weather events.
This podcast will examine the state of cities worldwide and the challenges facing them. In Asia, we’ll look closer at the issue of ever-growing urban problems of crowding, transit and pollution. In North America, we’ll find out how Miami is facing an immediate threat from rising sea levels caused by climate change. And in Europe, we’ll investigate how Athens is trying to protect itself against the potentially fatal effects of extreme heat.
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The Danish energy company Ørsted is known to many by its previous name, Dong Energy. In 2017, the decision was made to rebrand the business after the Danish scientist Hans Christian Ørsted, and for a simple reason: Dansk Olie og Naturgas A/S no longer owned any assets in either oil or natural gas. The change was massive for a company that at one point ran coal, oil and natural gas power stations responsible for half of Denmark’s CO₂ emissions, not to mention those resulting from the oil and gas extracted by the company on its North Sea rigs. By 2018 though, 75% of Ørsted’s total energy generation came from renewable sources – by 2025 it will be 99%. Since 2006, coal consumption has been reduced by 81% and by 2025 the company is targeting a drop in the total carbon intensity of its energy generation of 98% – a tremendous turnaround.
In the midst of this rebirth, in 2016, the company went public with the largest-ever IPO in Denmark and the second largest in the world that year. In just 10 years an entirely new firm had been born with a new attitude to energy.
In this podcast episode Euromoney will examine what the energy industry can learn from the Ørsted story. We look at how financial markets can support the industry's transition towards low-carbon; the roles of investment and divestment in addressing low-carbon goals; and why there is both an environmental and economic imperative to appraise the risks of climate change, and take action to prevent it. -
Saknas det avsnitt?
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What is the cost of a refugee crisis? Across the globe, each day, people are forced to flee their homes in the face of persecution, discrimination and insecurity. Families are split, livelihoods ruined and incomes and official identities lost. The human cost is incalculable. Yet for those determined to support the world’s refugees, it is essential to understand the scale of the task at hand if they are to source and allocate the resources needed to return people to dignity, stability and eventual prosperity.
Today, 85% of the world’s displaced population are in the developing world, where fragile economies struggle to support those in need and underdeveloped infrastructures creak beneath growing environmental threats. Organisations from the UN to the World Health Organisation predict that by 2050 environmental changes alone could drive hundreds of millions from their homes. Finance will play a critical role in avoiding disaster here, from simple financial inclusion schemes to bold plans to boost national infrastructures and underpin economic stability. None of this will come cheap, but it is surely a price worth paying. -
For generations humanity has taken more from the oceans than it puts back in. Today, man’s contribution to the seas is significant, but damaging. Overfishing has decimated entire species and what is left swims amid clouds of plastic waste so dense that it gathers in vast floating islands. Increased carbon emissions have increased sea temperatures, melting polar regions and cooking corals worldwide - by 2030 90% of coral reefs will be threatened with extinction.
Can the crisis be averted? Can the blue bond follow its older sibling, the green bond, in drawing investment into ocean conservation? Recent ground breaking offers are attracting investors and corporations alike, with global giants such as Prudential, Coca-Cola, Unilever, PepsiCo and Danone putting their weight behind counteracting the damage done. The question is, can we do enough in time? -
Euromoney explores the ways in which developing countries are funding, building and maintaining critical infrastructure in harmony with the UN’s sustainability goals.
Led by China, Asia saw the highest growth rate in the green bond market in 2018, as well as the highest number of new issuers. Meanwhile, the $34bn in Chinese green bond issuance in 2018 represents a remarkable change of outlook for the world’s biggest contributor to CO2 emissions.
Green bonds like these have shown the way forward in socially responsible investments, yet they only represent a tiny fraction of the overall bond market. In this podcast, Euromoney examines what is needed to move the needle on green finance in a meaningful way. -
In this opening episode of a 6-part series on Financing a sustainable planet, Euromoney explores where the balance should lie between profit and purpose. We examine whether sustainable finance can be used as a force to address the environmental and social challenges we face.
Have we reached a tipping point where it is no longer acceptable to make any kind of profit without first considering its impact on the planet and the people who live on it?
Sustainability is becoming a watch word, though there is some way to go before it becomes mainstream. What is the true value of these sustainable investments and are they going to move the needle?
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Humanity is confronting huge challenges. Climate change, population growth, technological innovations alongside growing inequality, geopolitical shifts, and more. What is the role of the financial industry in addressing these monumental issues? How can we best put capital to work in service of the planet? Can sustainable finance help us transition to a sustainable planet?
These are just some of the questions we’re going to be asking in this Euromoney podcast series 'Financing a sustainable planet'.