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COP26 new commitments from major carbon emitters have the opportunity to limit warming to 2°C

The British Guardian reported that the greenhouse gas emission commitments made at the COP26 climate conference in Glasgow have the opportunity to limit global temperature rise to below 2°C. This is the first time that the world has come so close to the Paris Agreement goal. COP26 Chairman: The global carbon emissions halving target by 2030 is still lacking. Research from the University of Melbourne in Australia found that the plans of India, the world's third largest emitter, have a significant impact on global warming predictions. If the commitments made by India and other countries at the conference are implemented, warming could be about 1.9°C above pre-industrial levels, below the 2°C limit but above the 1.5°C target in the 2015 Paris climate agreement. However, Miliban, the shadow business secretary of the British Labor Party and who participated in the Copenhagen Climate Summit in 2009, warned that there is still a lot of work to be done. Miliban told the Guardian: "Any progress is a good thing, but we need to be very careful about these empty and vague goals that are set 30 years or more out. For example, Australia targets net zero by 2050, but its 2030 plan will actually lead to 4°C warming. This decade is decisive and there is a reason why we need to halve emissions within ten years so that we can maintain the urgency, clarity and concreteness needed to move towards 1.5°C. We cannot allow political leaders to change their goals." COP26 Chairman Alok Sharma said that the new commitments are important progress, but this COP still needs a lot of effort to achieve the 1.5°C goal. Sharma said,

EU pledges 4 billion euros to help climate-vulnerable countries, calls on US to follow suit

European Commission President von der Leyen said that by 2027, the EU will invest an additional 4 billion euros ($5 billion) to support low-income and climate-vulnerable countries. Rich countries have pledged to provide $100 billion in climate finance, which is still $20 billion short. The Executive Committee hopes that the United States will follow up before the 26th Conference of the Parties (COP26) climate negotiations in November this year and strengthen its climate finance contribution. Von der Leyen said that there is still a gap of US$20 billion before rich countries have committed to mobilizing US$100 billion per year by 2020, which needs to be filled quickly. Speaking at the EU Parliament on the 15th, Von der Leyen told lawmakers that major emitters such as the EU and the United States "have special responsibilities towards the least developed and most vulnerable countries." "The EU contributes $25 billion every year, but other countries still have a long way to go in achieving global goals," she said. "Europe is ready to do more, but hopes that the United States and our partners can also step up their efforts." Developing The country has regarded closing this gap as a condition for successful negotiations at the 26th Conference of the Parties. A spokesperson for the European Commission told Climate Home that the 4 billion euros are new funds from the EU budget from 2021 to 2027 and are not additional contributions from member states. U.S. climate finance goals have not yet returned to the right track from the Trump era, said Jennifer Tollmann, senior policy adviser at the think tank E3G. “The EU is already the largest climate finance donor in the world, and this is a powerful move,” she said. happy to see

Circular economy coaching case sharing-Application of biodegradable technology of agricultural materials

Abstract: Due to the increasing demand for green materials in emerging applications of biodegradable polymers, polylactic acid (PLA) can overcome its inherent brittleness, poor heat resistance and melt resistance without compromising its significant stiffness and strength. Elasticity has emerged as a special challenge in polymer science. Achieving this without using any expensive reagents/additives and/or complex processing techniques is another key aspect in developing viable alternatives to petrochemical-based plastics for agricultural materials. Keywords: polylactic acid; heat resistance Introduction: One of the most common applications of biodegradable polymers is in the manufacture of agricultural materials. One of the most promising bio-based polyesters is polylactic acid (PLA), a biopolymer chemically synthesized using monomers obtained from agricultural resources such as wheat, corn, and cassava. Polylactic acid can be made from lactic acid or, most commonly, from its cyclic dimer, lactic acid, via ring-opening polymerization. Currently, PLA is one of the most commonly used biodegradable polymers, especially in agricultural materials, due to its availability in the market, low price, and similar mechanical and barrier properties to PET. Green and sustainable biodegradable polymers are major challenges in developing sustainable solutions to global environmental issues through green manufacturing and engineering. In this context, two main challenges related to biodegradable polymer science can be listed as: (i) development and large-scale production of green materials that will be replaced by petrochemical-based plastics, and (ii) high added value Recycling/reuse of raw materials from industrial waste. one party

The global e-waste pile is heavier than the Great Wall. Experts call for proper recycling of 3C products

October 14 is International E-Waste Day, and experts are calling on households, businesses and governments to get more scrapped or unused electronic devices into repair or recycling facilities to recover precious metals and reduce the need to mine new resources. This year's waste electronic and electrical equipment (WEEE) has piled up like a mountain, with an estimated total weight of about 57.4 million tons, which is heavier than the heaviest building on earth, the Great Wall of China. Hidden Treasures Ruediger Kuehr, director and chief of staff of the Sustainable Cycle Project (SCYCLE) of the United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR), said that electronic and electrical components are a kind of "urban mine" with huge the value of. SCYCLE performs and shares comprehensive, practical research to help society reduce the environmental damage caused by the production, use and disposal of electronic and electrical waste. "One ton of discarded mobile phones contains more gold than one ton of gold ore," Dr. Quill asserted. "For example, 1 million mobile phones contain 24 kilograms of gold, 16,000 kilograms of copper, 350 kilograms of silver and 14 kilograms of palladium. These resources can be recycled and returned to the production cycle. If they are not recycled, new materials need to be mined continuously. , thereby endangering the environment.” United Nations University SCYCLE Project High School

"Urban mining" new technology quickly recovers precious metals from electronic waste

The British Independent reported that scientists have developed a new technology for extracting valuable metals from electronic waste. The energy consumption is 1/500 of the existing method, which can reduce the need for mining raw materials and the waste generated will not harm the environment. . "The largest waste has been turned into a treasure." This technology is based on the "flash Joule heating method". Joule thermal flash evaporation is an innovative method that can produce graphene from carbon sources such as wood and plastic. A research team from Rice University in Texas has improved the "Joule thermal flash evaporation method" to recover rhodium, palladium, gold, silver and other substances from waste for reuse. The new technology works by using electric current to rapidly heat waste to 3400K (3124°C), causing the aforementioned metals to evaporate into gas for separation, storage or disposal. The research team stated that "flash evaporation" can remove highly toxic heavy metals remaining in materials, such as chromium, arsenic, cadmium, mercury and lead, leaving by-products with extremely low metal content. With more than 40 million tons of electronic waste produced globally every year, this new form of "urban mining" has huge potential, giving technology companies the opportunity to avoid sourcing raw materials from countries and regions with security, corruption and conflict issues. "Here, the largest amounts of waste are turned into treasures," said Professor James Tour of Rice University. "This could reduce the need to mine ore, strip the surface and use large amounts of water in remote and dangerous areas around the world. The treasure of sex...is in our trash cans." Toole said cell phones, etc.

Abolition and turning stones into gold Qingda University Professor Ling Yongjian uses green chemistry to promote circular economy

5G commercial transfer is coming soon. When technology giants are launching new 5G mobile phones one after another and countries are intensively deploying base stations to lay out the layout for the next communication era, the world has to face up to the environmental pollution caused by communication chips. 5G communications can be successfully unveiled, and "gallium arsenide" is the biggest contributor behind it. The material properties of "gallium arsenide" allow electrons to move faster, and it is a chip raw material for making mobile phone power amplifiers (PA); however, "arsenic" in it is also a century-old poison that causes cancer and is harmful to the environment. Arsenic was used to kill people in ancient times. Blackfoot disease is also caused by arsenic contaminating water quality. During the manufacturing process of communication wafers, if arsenic-containing wastewater or waste oil is not properly treated, arsenic will enter the groundwater system through weathering and dissolution, causing pollution. In the age of communications, dealing with arsenic pollution has become a global issue. The research team of Professor Ling Yongjian of the Department of Chemistry of Tsinghua University, who has long been specialized in green chemistry methods, separated arsenic from "waste cutting oil" containing gallium arsenide through "wet smelting[1]", and the processed "non-toxic cutting oil" "It can be purified and turned into a synthetic raw material for "carbon quantum dots" in vivo imaging detection reagents. By turning waste oil into products of high economic value, Ling Yongjian's team successfully turned stone into gold and achieved the goal of resource reuse. Using green chemistry methods to solve chemical pollution, investing in green chemistry, and promoting the recycling of waste resources were not the main focus of Ling Yongjian’s early research. After graduating from the United States in 1989, he returned to China to teach at Tsinghua University. He was engaged in research on "analytical chemistry" and often cooperated with organizations such as the Environmental Protection Agency and the Consumer Council to apply mass spectrometry analysis.

Greenhouse gas concentration breaks record again in 2020, WMO calls on next week's conference to "significantly increase" carbon reduction commitments

Reuters reported that the United Nations warned on the 25th that greenhouse gas concentrations reached a record high last year and that the world's pace of controlling rising temperatures has been "significantly derailed." This clearly illustrates the specific tasks of the United Nations Glasgow Climate Summit (COP26). Carbon dioxide concentrations soar WMO: We are totally off track A report from the United Nations World Meteorological Organization (WMO) shows that despite a temporary decline in emissions during the epidemic lockdown, carbon dioxide concentrations soared to 413.2ppm in 2020, higher than average over the past ten years. WMO Secretary-General Petteri Taalas said the current rate of increase in greenhouse gases will lead to temperature rises "well in excess" of the 2015 Paris Agreement target of 1.5°C above this century's pre-industrial average. "We are completely off track," he said. "We need to re-examine our industrial, energy and transport systems and our entire way of life," calling for a "significant increase" in emissions reduction commitments at the COP26 conference, which begins at the weekend. The city of Glasgow is making final preparations for a climate summit that may be the world's best remaining chance of keeping global warming within the limits of the 1.5°C target of the Paris Agreement. According to another analysis by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), if all current commitments by countries are realized, global emissions in 2030 will be 16% higher than in 2010. this

台積電、日月光等率先加入 SEMI組全球首個半導體氣候聯盟

為​​加速半導體產業減少溫室氣體排放的腳步,國際半導體產業協會(SEMI)今(3日)宣布成立全球首個半導體氣候聯盟(Semiconductor Climate Consortium,SCC),目前已有逾60家的跨半導體價值鏈創始企業會員共同響應參與,台灣有五家企業加入,由日月光、台積電、南亞科、環球晶圓、漢民科技率先響應成為SCC創始會員。 全球首個半導體產業鏈聯盟 目標2050淨零碳排 SEMI今(3日)發布新聞稿指出,全球半導體氣候聯盟(SCC)為全球第一個全由半導體價值鏈企業所組成之聯盟,成員未來將透過合作保持密切溝通、共同技術創新、設定具體減碳目標,並於2050年達成淨零碳排,同時也將每年發布三大碳排放範圍的年度進度報告。 SCC創始會員共65家,其中有五家台灣企業在列,日月光、環球晶圓、漢民科技、南亞科技、台積電。其餘成員包括世界知名企業,如超微(AMD)、艾司摩爾(ASML)、格羅方德(GlobalFoundries)、Google、英特爾(Intel)、美光(Micron)、微軟(Microsoft)、三星電子(Samsung Electronics)等。 SEMI全球行

Carbon emissions also need to be paid for. Experts call on countries to quickly establish a "carbon debt" mechanism.

As the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere continues to rise, there is an increasing risk that our descendants will be saddled with a massive carbon debt. Researchers from the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) and international partners have called for the immediate establishment of a Carbon Removal Obligation and determination of responsibilities for carbon debt. The next EU emissions trading plan to be revised is An opportunity to import. Scholar: The world should obtain funds to implement carbon debt before the carbon budget is exhausted. Over the past few decades, governments have jointly committed to slowing global warming through agreements such as the Kyoto Protocol and the Paris Agreement. Despite many countries ratifying these agreements, atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations continue to rise. At the current rate of development, we are working hard to use up the remaining CO2 emissions available before warming reaches 1.5°C. If this so-called "carbon budget" is exhausted before the world reaches net-zero emissions, then we will have to remove a ton of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere for every ton of carbon dioxide we emit. In other words, if we continue on our current trajectory—which now seems likely—we will accumulate a carbon debt. A new study published in the journal Nature points out that the net-zero commitments made by an increasing number of countries already assume that large carbon debts need to be compensated through long-term net negative emissions. For example, the ideal global scenario estimates in the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special Report on 1.5°C Warming

Development trends and responses to the requirements of the International Supply Chain Sustainability Code of Conduct

Every business and organization will have an impact on the environment, society and economy. For responsible organizations that want to face sustainability issues in a positive way, procurement will be a powerful and effective tool that can be used to change procurement behavior throughout the entire life cycle through sustainable procurement policies and practices. possible impacts and strive to minimize adverse impacts, in order to contribute to the achievement of sustainable development goals. Therefore, the supply chain has become an important role. Effective management of the supply chain is also an important part of improving the competitiveness of the organization. In addition to quality and cost considerations, the supply chain's sustainable development behavior is also an important consideration in supplier management; In order to strengthen the supply chain's response to sustainable development, it is necessary to start from the institutional aspect. In addition to formulating "Supplier Management Guidelines" and matching them with mechanisms such as evaluation and satisfaction surveys, suppliers must sign relevant "letters of commitment" to jointly move towards sustainability. The direction of development is forward. Recently, the novel coronavirus has severely impacted the organizational operations and economic development of various countries. In addition to the tourism and aviation industries that bear the brunt, a more profound impact on other global industries is the problem of "disconnected" supply chains, such as the shortage of semiconductor chips. Therefore, how to manage and transform the supply chain towards sustainability has become one of the most important issues for organizations now. In the past, supply chain management was often carried out by establishing a "supplier management" mechanism, which included the following:  New supplier surveys.  Supplier written and on-site review.  Supplier screening and grading.  Supplier product assurance system audit.  Supplier performance evaluation system. Now it is because of

EMSA: EU maritime emissions must be slashed

The European Maritime Safety Agency (EMSA) warned on September 1, 2021 that if the European Union wants to achieve carbon neutrality in 2050, it must further significantly reduce emissions from maritime transport. EMSA published a report stating that shipping to and within the EU accounted for 13.5% of transport-related emissions on the European continent in 2019. According to EMSA, nearly 77% of Europe’s external trade, and 35% of all trade volume between EU member states, occurs by sea shipping. The report said that although the EU's carbon dioxide emissions from navigation have dropped by about 26% since 1990, they still account for about 16 million tons, or the equivalent of 18% of global maritime emissions. The report attributed the reduction in emissions to fleet renewal and greater energy efficiency. EMSA said that for Europe to become climate-neutral by 2050, the maritime sector needs continued action to reduce its environmental footprint. Further action is also necessary in order to "achieve our zero pollution ambition and halt and reverse the loss of biodiversity". As for another dangerous global warming and acidic gas, emissions of sulfur dioxide reached 1.63 million tons in 2019, accounting for 16% of global maritime emissions. The report noted that these emissions were due to stricter European legislation on sulfur dioxide in fuel.

Singapore will set up a nature-based carbon rights trading market to focus on ecological restoration in Southeast Asia

Singapore will establish a carbon rights trading market focused on nature conservation projects, which is expected to help protect threatened tropical forests in Southeast Asia while also opening up ready sources of carbon rights to companies. The newly launched carbon rights trading market is called Climate Impact It is a rights exchange that mainly serves multinational companies and institutional investors. Taking advantage of geographical convenience to develop a "nature-based" carbon rights trading market, CIX is a voluntary carbon trading market jointly established by the Singapore State-owned Investment Corporation, the Stock Exchange, DBS Bank (Singapore's largest bank) and the British Standard Chartered Bank. In May this year, Ravi Menon, director of the Monetary Authority of Singapore, said at an online press conference that CIX is expected to solve the problems of "fragmented carbon rights trading market", "low market liquidity and concerns about the quality of carbon rights" in Southeast Asia. Meng Weneng said that in the future, companies of all sizes will be able to purchase high-quality, nature-based carbon credits directly from specific projects in Southeast Asia and other regions through CIX, so that more companies can Participate in the voluntary carbon market and support the conservation, restoration and protection of natural ecosystems while achieving corporate sustainability goals. Meng Wenneng said, "Singapore is located at the core of Southeast Asia. This area has great potential to develop nature-based solutions.

When the ASEAN market encounters the EU's "Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism", is it trade protection or an opportunity for low-carbon transformation?

On July 14 this year, the EU's long-planned Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) was officially announced. In the future, it will impose taxes on imported products that do not comply with EU carbon emission regulations, which has attracted the attention of various countries. The EU hopes to use this mechanism to prevent companies from moving carbon-intensive industries to countries with looser environmental regulations, causing the risk of carbon leakage. However, how will Southeast Asian countries with lower levels of development, as well as countries that have not yet established a carbon pricing mechanism, face the upcoming carbon tariff challenge? A survey report by a German think tank: The eight Asia-Pacific countries support and oppose it. Some countries accuse the CBAM mechanism expected to be piloted by the EU in 2023 as a trade protectionist measure. Liu Youbin, spokesman for China's Ministry of Ecology and Environment, said at a press conference on July 26 that this is "a unilateral measure that expands the issue of climate change into the field of trade. This violates the principles (of the World Trade Organization)." Asian countries opinions are not monolithic. Germany's Konrad Adenauer Foundation released a report in March this year analyzing the views of eight Asia-Pacific countries on EU CBAM. The eight countries include Australia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and Thailand. Christian Hübner of the foundation said that based on the survey, Singapore is not opposed to the carbon border adjustment mechanism, "as long as it is fair and consistent with international norms and

Western climate plan: Britain bans oil truck sales in 2040, US proposes carbon tax on imported goods

A look at carbon tariffs, 2035 ban on sales of fuel vehicles, and 2030 renewable energy targets. Following Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s 10-point climate plan launched in November last year, he will ban the sale of cars and vans using new petrol and diesel in 2030. , the UK once again announced that it will ban the sale of new petrol and diesel large trucks by 2040 as part of its 2050 net-zero emissions transport plan. On the other hand, the EU and the United States made progress on the carbon border tax almost simultaneously on the 14th. UK transport emissions reduction to increase, ban on freight oil trucks and zero-emission domestic flights in 2040 Transport is the most polluting industry in the UK, accounting for about 1/3 of the country's carbon dioxide emissions before the COVID-19 pandemic. The UK’s plan to cut transport emissions also includes achieving net-zero aviation emissions by 2050, with the goal of reducing emissions from domestic flights to net-zero by early 2040. But the plan has been criticized in the past as unrealistic as technology to reduce aviation's climate impact is still in its infancy. The government also said it would replace its government fleet of 40,000 cars and trucks with zero-emission vehicles by 2027, three years earlier than originally planned. The British government has yet to announce full details of its transport decarbonisation plan, which is expected to be released before Cop26, the United Nations climate summit hosted by the UK in November. Europe and the United States are simultaneously promoting carbon border taxes, and the United States plans to increase "pollution import fees." The carbon border tax recently released by the European Union is designed to protect domestic manufacturing while pressuring other countries to reduce emissions. On the same day, the American people

Japan's Ministry of Environment plans to require the comprehensive introduction of a "carbon tax" in tax reform next year

Japan's Ministry of the Environment basically decided on the 27th that in the 2022 tax system revision, it will require the full introduction of a "carbon tax" based on carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions aimed at strengthening global warming countermeasures. This is intended to be a powerful means to achieve a decarbonized society, the signature policy proposed by the Yoshihide Suga administration. The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry and the business community have shown a cautious attitude as they are wary of the increased burden, and will coordinate comprehensively on whether to impose taxes and the level of collection by the end of the year. The Ministry of Environment presented the outline of the proposal at a closed meeting of the Liberal Democratic Party group. It states for the first time that it will take measures to promote "carbon pricing" that taxes CO2 to promote emission reductions, and "promote professional and technical discussions while also considering the burden method" on carbon tax requirements, one of the representative methods. However, no specific tax items, tax rates and other system designs were given, which will be discussed in the future. In 2012, Japan introduced a "global warming countertax" as a type of carbon tax, which is mainly levied on companies using fossil fuels such as oil and coal. Compared with Europe, it is accused of low tax rates and poor emission reduction effects. The comprehensive introduction of carbon taxes may expand this. However, Japan already has a petroleum and coal tax and a volatile oil tax on gasoline, etc., and there are strong opinions that the overall adjustment should be unified. The coordination work is also expected to have twists and turns. Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga in December last year instructed the Ministry of the Environment and the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry to explore the introduction of carbon pricing. Although the methods have been discussed through separate expert meetings, the Ministry of the Environment, which wants to focus on carbon tax, and the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, which is exploring options that lighten the burden on companies, are not in sync. An official from the Ministry of the Environment said: “Finally,

Tetra Pak, Taiwan’s first grown carton, joins hands with Yimei to make food packaging materials more sustainable

Most of the cartons used to package food need to be coated with a layer of plastic in order to protect the food and block sunlight. Nowadays, however, petrification is not the only option for this layer of glue. Taiwan's first "recyclable bioplastic" all-plant box is jointly launched by Tetra Pak Taiwan and Yimei Food Company. Not only does it use paper materials with the Forest Stewardship Council FSC mark, but the film also uses "Bonsucro sugar cane sustainability certification" ” mark and 100% recycled plant-based polyethylene (PE), so that consumers can drink it fresh and recycle it according to their daily habits. These efforts have also resulted in Tetra Pak being ranked among the top 50 sustainable development and climate leaders in the world. Yimei launched this fresh milk in October 2019 using university-proven paper pulp and sugar gum in paper containers. It uses Tetra Pak's all-plant box. A small leaf is embossed on the bottle cap to quietly indicate its identity - —Even the bottle caps are grown. Because paper containers need to hold drinks, soups, and water ingredients, they must be waterproof, insulated, and even block sunlight. Therefore, the inner film is usually added with multiple layers of plastic film or aluminum foil insulating layers, which also distinguishes paper containers from paper. Recycling falls into different categories. Paper containers are not just paper, but composite materials. Traditionally, petrochemical materials are used for this layer of glue. In recent years, plant glues such as soybeans, corn, and pasture have been added. For this all-plant box jointly launched by Tetra Pak and Yimei, the cardboard comes from FSC™ certified forests, and the glue film is Made from 100% plant-based polyethylene (PE) from Bonsucro sustainably verified sugar cane. "These are raw materials that can be grown and will continue to grow.

The world's first crewless, zero-emission cargo ship sets sail in Norway to reduce nitrogen oxide and carbon dioxide emissions

Norwegian company Yara has created the world's first zero-emission autonomous cargo ship, Yara Birkeland, which runs on battery power and can achieve zero emissions. The ship is expected to sail between two Norwegian towns for the first time before the end of the year. There will be no crew on board and its voyage will be monitored by three onshore data control centres. The Norwegian company Yara, which developed the vessel, said the Birkeland will depart from the town of Her?ya and anchor in Brevikt. Birkeland uses 7 MWh of batteries, which is about 1,000 times that of an electric car. It can reduce the emission of nitrogen oxides (toxic pollutants and greenhouse gases) and carbon dioxide, has a maximum speed of 24 km/h, and can place 103 containers inside the ship. Although there are currently no plans for any major ocean voyages. But Yara also shows that the ship is capable of doing similar things to today's fossil-fuel-burning cargo ships. The shipping industry currently accounts for 2.5% to 3% of global greenhouse gas emissions, according to the International Maritime Organization. Almost all of Norway's electricity is generated by hydropower, which still produces greenhouse gases but is generally considered to have much lower carbon emissions than burning fossil fuels. Source: CSRone (https://csrone.com/news/7056)

EU proposes draft climate change plan Fit for 55: Comprehensive transformation of society and economy

Carbon tariffs, a ban on the sale of fuel vehicles in 2035, and the 2030 renewable energy target were announced by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Vice President Frans Timmermans on the evening of Wednesday (14th) Taipei time. Scale climate change plan. This "Fit for 55" (Fit for 55) proposes a total of 12 policy measures to ensure that future climate and energy policies are consistent with the goals set by the European Climate Law, and will lead other countries in Scotland in a few months. Glasgow's appearance at the United Nations climate conference in November follows. Fit for 55: Looking towards a climate-neutral Europe on greenhouse gas reduction in 2030 55% In order to achieve its contribution to the goals of the Paris Agreement, the European Commission proposed a green policy in December 2019, with the goal of making Europe the first country in the world by 2050. A climate neutral continent. This goal is officially written into the European Climate Law that will take effect in July 2021, with a specific commitment to reduce net greenhouse gas emissions by 55% in 2030 compared with 1990. In order to achieve the goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 55% in nine years, the European Commission held an online press conference on the evening of the 14th and announced "55 packages" covering climate, energy, construction, carbon trading, land use, transportation, taxation Endowment and other aspects to drive economic and social transformation. Since it involves a wide range of areas, it will not only affect energy, transportation

Saving global warming can no longer just reduce carbon emissions! Walmart and Amazon plan to achieve "net-zero emissions" by 2040

The EU's carbon border adjustment mechanism is approaching, and countries and major brands have launched countermeasures. Walmart is actively reviewing its value chain and is expected to use 100% renewable energy by 2035. Amazon even hopes to use 100% renewable energy for operations by 2025. Global emission reductions are unstoppable, and Taiwan has also called for reaching a net-zero goal by 2050. It is currently evaluating sustainable strategies that can be implemented by various industries and promoting energy transformation. In order to combat climate change, 195 member states of the United Nations adopted the Paris Agreement in 2015. The goal is to control the global climate rise within 2 degrees Celsius before the pre-industrial revolution by 2100, and even preferably reach 1.5 degrees. However, in 2018, the authoritative international climate science organization "United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change" pointed out that the global climate rise will exceed 1.5 degrees in 2052. If the average temperature is to return to within 1.5 degrees, global carbon dioxide emissions will It must be reset to zero in 2050. This goal is less than 30 years away from now. The European Union announced the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism to improve the past carbon reduction methods that only addressed the symptoms but not the root cause. In view of the climate crisis facing the world, the European Union announced the draft "Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism" on July 15, 2021. It is expected to be implemented on a trial basis for three years starting in 2023. Initial requirements Imported steel, aluminum, cement, fertilizers and power products are required to declare carbon emissions, and taxes will be levied on the greenhouse gas emissions of imported goods, and will gradually be expanded to other industries. Although all countries have established greenhouse gas emission controls in the past, high-carbon production companies

Steel can be produced without coal. Sweden's first batch of "green steel" is delivered to Volvo, taking an important step towards zero fossil fuels.

Swedish company Hybrit claims to have produced the world's first batch of "green steel" that does not use coal. It has been trial-produced and shipped to truck manufacturer Volvo, and is expected to be officially commercially produced in 2026. IEA: The steel industry is the largest industrial consumer of coal. The performance of steel production in terms of emissions and other sustainability-related indicators is relatively mature, but there is still much room for improvement. According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the steel industry directly emits 260 million tons of carbon dioxide every year. In 2019, this figure was higher than direct emissions from industries such as cement and chemicals. The IEA said the steel industry is the largest industrial consumer of coal. About 75% of the energy needs of the steel industry are met by coal. A year ago, Hybrit began trial operations at its green steel pilot plant in Lulea, northern Sweden, hoping to use renewable electricity and hydrogen to replace traditional coking coal to produce steel. Hydrogen is also key to the EU achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. Volvo plans to use green steel to manufacture prototype cars and vehicle parts from next year. Hybrit is a joint venture between steel manufacturer SSAB, Swedish utility company Vattenfall and mining company LKAB. SSAB's CO2 emissions account for 10% and 7% of Sweden and Finland's emissions. The company said the trial delivery is "an important step towards a zero-fossil fuel value chain... The aim is to deliver fossil-free steel to the market as early as 2026 and at industrial scale"

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