• English
  • 简体中文
  • 繁體中文
  • Tiếng Việt
  • ไทย
  • Indonesia
Subscribe
Real-time News
On April 2, the General Office of the State Council issued the "Implementation Plan on Establishing a Comprehensive Evaluation System for Enterprise Credit Status." The Implementation Plan requires improving the public credit evaluation system, unifying public credit evaluation rules, industry credit evaluation management, and channels for publicizing public credit evaluation results, improving the industry credit evaluation coordination mechanism, standardizing the development of market-based credit evaluation, accelerating the integration and application of public credit evaluation and market-based credit evaluation, better leveraging the supporting role of credit evaluation in the financing of small and micro enterprises, improving the evaluation update and adjustment mechanism after credit repair, ensuring smooth channels for handling objections and appeals, and implementing credit evaluation management responsibilities.Italys seasonally adjusted retail sales rose 0% month-on-month in February, compared with 0.60% in the previous month.According to the German business weekly Wirtschaftswoche, Ryanairs CEO expects oil prices to fall soon; he is "optimistic" that fuel prices will drop again in the fourth quarter of this year, or even earlier.On April 2nd, Thai Finance Minister Ekniti stated on Thursday that the Ministry of Energy will recalculate refining and refined petroleum product sales costs by April 6th to curb rising fuel prices. The new calculations will be submitted to the Cabinet for review and should result in lower energy prices. Ekniti has been appointed head of a newly established committee responsible for reviewing fuel cost structures and pricing. He said that under the current circumstances, refining-related calculations may be inflated, and consumers should pay lower prices at gas stations. The Ministry of Energy has been instructed to recalculate reasonable refining and sales costs, verify the actual impact of war-related premiums, and propose mechanisms to ensure cost reductions. He also stated that the government hopes to verify the true "war premium" and other additional costs, such as freight and insurance, to determine the true cost burden borne by refining companies. According to data from the University of the Thai Chamber of Commerce, during the upcoming Thai New Year holiday (April 13th-15th), Thai consumer spending may decrease by 3.7% year-on-year to approximately 130 billion baht (approximately US$3.98 billion) due to factors such as rising oil prices.The UKs energy regulator OFGEM said continued volatility in the global natural gas market could put pressure on market prices during the future price cap period.

Plastic Consumption Is Projected to Nearly Double by 2050, According to Studies

Haiden Holmes

Feb 27, 2023 14:08

微信截图_20230227135413.png


According to research published on Monday, plastic consumption in G20 nations is on track to nearly double by the middle of the 21st century unless a comprehensive and legally binding global treaty to reduce consumption is drafted.


According to Back to Blue, a research group operated by the Economist Impact think-tank and the Nippon Foundation, existing initiatives to increase recycling or reduce single-use plastic consumption have "barely scratched the surface" and a more comprehensive global plan is required.


In Uruguay, the United Nations began negotiations on an agreement to combat plastic pollution in November, with the goal of drafting a legally binding treaty by the end of the following year. 175 countries have joined up for the negotiations.


Nonetheless, if negotiations fail, annual plastic production in G20 nations could reach 451 million tonnes by 2050 based on current development rates, according to Back to Blue - an increase of nearly 75 percent from 2019.


The research group stated, "There should be no illusions that the treaty negotiations will be anything but difficult and treacherous." "The likelihood of failure is high, both in terms of no treaty emerging and a treaty that is insufficient to reverse the plastic tide."


It called for a stricter ban on single-use plastic, as well as increased production taxes and mandatory programs to hold companies accountable for the entire lifecycle of their products, including recycling and disposal.


Back to Blue stated that the combined measures could limit annual consumption to 325 million tonnes by 2050, but that would still be a 25 percent increase from 2019 and the equivalent of 238 million garbage vehicles.


Brazil, the United States, Indonesia, and Turkey are among the G20 countries that have yet to introduce national prohibitions on single-use plastic products, according to the report.