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EU’s red tape bonfire puts AI ahead of privacy protection

Euractiv.com - Mon, 11/10/2025 - 06:00
The leaked draft omnibus makes significant changes to the GDPR and ePrivacy rules, amid pressure from big tech
Categories: Défense, European Union

Putin’s nuclear blackmail betrays fear and insecurity

Euractiv.com - Mon, 11/10/2025 - 06:00
A simple rule of thumb in Russia-watching is that when the Kremlin starts talking about nuclear weapons and cutting-edge military technology, this usually means that elsewhere things are not going well
Categories: Défense, European Union

EU’s ‘sin industries’ go to war over taxes

Euractiv.com - Mon, 11/10/2025 - 06:00
Behind the scenes, alcohol, tobacco, and food lobbies vie to shape who pays more under EU health tax plans
Categories: Défense, European Union

Brazil’s Biofuels Push Undermines Environmental Integrity at COP30

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 11/07/2025 - 07:05

Global warming is linked to increasingly dry conditions and devastating wildfires across the UNECE region covering Europe, North America, the Caucasus and Central Asia. Credit: Unsplash/Caleb Cook / Source: UN News

By Cian Delaney
BRUSSELS, Belgium, Nov 7 2025 (IPS)

President Prabowo Subianto welcomed his counterpart Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of Brazil to Jakarta recently to strengthen ties between the fast-growing economies.

The timing is significant. The meeting was just weeks before Brazil hosts the COP30 climate change talks in Belém, a bustling port city at the mouth of the Amazon River.

Like Brazil, Indonesia is home to expansive rainforests that attract intense international scrutiny because of their rich biodiversity and globally-important role as carbon sinks. And like Brazil, Indonesia has implemented new policies designed to boost biofuel use.

The leaders, who agreed to expand cooperation as two of the world’s largest biofuel producers, contend that the energy sources are needed to reduce reliance on imports and cut emissions.

But Indonesia has been down this road before.

Cian Delaney

In the mid-2000s, booming international demand for highly versatile palm oil—a key ingredient for biofuels—led the country to clear millions of hectares of rainforest and peatland to make way for vast plantations.

The gold rush for the oil displaced indigenous communities, smallholder farmers, and destroyed vital ecosystems that critically endangered species like orangutans, Sumatran tigers, and the Javan rhinoceros depend on to survive.

In Borneo alone, far from reducing carbon pollution, slash and burn agriculture caused the largest single-year global emissions increase seen in 2,000 years, according to NASA.

Falling demand and the introduction of conservation measures helped slow deforestation over the subsequent decade, however, the Subianto-Lula meeting reflects a troubling resurgence of biofuels as a global commodity.

Brazil will ask the international community at COP30 to sign a pledge calling for a quadrupling of so-called “sustainable fuels”—biofuels chief among them—over the next decade.

The proposed pledge rests heavily on a new International Energy Agency (IEA) report that shows a fourfold increase can be achieved through innovative fuel developments and a doubling of biofuel use. In the fine print, however, the IEA notes that no additional land should be needed to meet the goal.

Brazil’s COP30 pledge makes no such distinction—raising concerns that growing demand will incentivize deforestation and heighten competition for land that is already scarce.

In August, Brazil lifted a soy moratorium that environmentalists credit for the significant conservation gains made over the past two decades to make way for more cultivation.

There is also the question of food.

Globally, about 90 percent of biofuel production relies on food staples. In 2023, the biofuel industry used around 200 million tonnes of corn, 8 million tonnes of wheat, 40 million tonnes of vegetable oil and enough sugarcane and sugarbeet to make 50 million tonnes of sugar.

By one estimation the energy stored in these crops could satisfy the minimum caloric requirements for 1.3 billion people, while it takes nearly 3,000 litres of water to produce enough biofuel to drive a car only 100 kilometers.

Biofuels also have serious implications for the atmosphere. Litre for litre it is estimated that, when the full impact of land use change caused by biofuel production is accounted for, they emit an average of 16% more carbon than the fossil fuels they replace.

But transitioning away from biofuels cannot ignore social and economic realities on the ground. Indonesia’s new policies, for example, stem from the country’s palm oil surplus and a need to maintain rural employment.

In response, Indonesian NGOs have increasingly been advocating for a holistic solution that would put caps on expansion, improve traceability, and invest in community-based governance, including a decentralized energy system.

At the beginning of the year, Indonesia formally joined the BRICS, an influential bloc of developing nations that make up almost half of the global population and conduct nearly a quarter of all trade.

The countries also account for 51 percent of emissions. In recent years, the bloc has made statements that suggest climate change is its top foreign policy priority and last July committed to increasing peer-to-peer climate finance.

If Indonesia and its new partners are serious about building a new kind of economy that works for the Global South without undermining progress made toward cutting emissions, they will need to match their lofty rhetoric with tangible action. Starting an honest conversation about biofuels in Belém would be a good place to start.

Cian Delaney is Campaign Coordinator, Transport & Environment

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Categories: Africa, Défense

US Skips High-Level Presence at COP30 Climate Summit

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 11/07/2025 - 06:43

Credit: United Nations

By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS, Nov 7 2025 (IPS)

“Has the world given up fighting climate change?” was a rhetorical question posed recently by the New York Times, perhaps with a degree of sarcasm.

It might look that way, says Christiana Figueres, a founding partner of the nongovernmental organization Global Optimism, “as US president Donald Trump blusters about fossil fuel, Bill Gates prioritizes children’s health over climate protection, and oil and gas companies plan decades of higher production.”

But that’s far from the whole picture, said Figueres, pointing out that the overwhelming majority of the world’s people — 80 to 89%, as Covering Climate Now partner newsrooms have been reporting — want stronger climate action.

Clean energy technologies are attracting twice as much investment as fossil fuels, and solar power and regenerative agriculture are surging across the Global South, she said.

Meanwhile, the United States will not send any high-level officials to the COP30, according to the White House.

John Noel, campaigner with Greenpeace International, told IPS the current administration is ceding leadership and leverage over the clean energy future to other countries.

“It is tragic, but not surprising. But for those of us heading to Belem from the United States, we are on solid ground with public opinion in broad support of the Paris Agreement and are more committed than ever.”

There are avenues, he pointed out, for climate ambition at the subnational level, such as ‘polluter pay’ mechanisms and state incentives for clean energy during the federal lapse in support.

“Global leaders at COP30 must move forward to adopt ambitious climate targets, end global deforestation by 2030, and advance a just energy transition and climate action must continue on” Noel declared.

Addressing the plenary of leaders at the Belem Climate Summit, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said November 6 “the hard truth is that we have failed to ensure we remain below 1.5 degrees.”

“Science now tells us that a temporary overshoot beyond the 1.5 limit – starting at the latest in the early 2030s – is inevitable. We need a paradigm shift to limit this overshoot’s magnitude and duration and quickly drive it down”.

Even a temporary overshoot will have dramatic consequences. It could push ecosystems past irreversible tipping points, expose billions to unlivable conditions, and amplify threats to peace and security.

Every fraction of a degree means more hunger, displacement, and loss – especially for those least responsible. This is moral failure – and deadly negligence, he warned.

The United Nations, however, will not give up on the 1.5 degrees goal, he declared.

While clean energy technology is rapidly progressing, political will is seen as weakening, and current efforts are insufficient to prevent significant warming. For example, despite a pledge to cut methane emissions, a new U.N. report indicates the goal will likely not be met.

Anuradha Mittal, Executive Director, The Oakland Institute, told IPS people must be very concerned that governments, especially Western countries that bear most of the responsibility for the climate crisis, are far from fulfilling their commitments in terms of decreased reduction of GHG, and far from assisting countries with adequate levels of financial assistance for mitigation and adaptation.

“It should be as concerning that the same governments, and prominent financial institutions like the World Bank, are promoting false climate solutions such as carbon markets, which have been proven to be totally ineffective at reducing emissions” she said.

Moreover, it must be clear for everyone that the new mining rush “we are witnessing for so-called critical minerals has nothing to do with the energy transition but rather with the global competition over minerals for various industries such as military, communication technologies, as well as electric vehicles”.

The massive amount of minerals such as lithium and cobalt will be impossible to supply without creating another environmental and human crisis. It is time for governments to make responsible choices towards a real energy transition and stop expanding sectors such as the military that divert public resources and contribute greatly to emissions, she pointed out.

It is widely documented that simply replacing existing gas-powered cars with electric vehicles is impossible. If today’s demand for EVs is projected to 2050, the lithium requirements of the US EV market alone would require triple the amount of lithium currently produced for the entire world.

“We need aggressive policies to reduce the number and size of personal vehicles and deploy effective public infrastructures and other low-carbon means of transportation” declared Mittal.

Speaking a press conference in Qatar November 4, Guterres said governments must arrive at the upcoming COP30 meeting in Brazil with concrete plans to slash their own emissions over the next decade while also delivering climate justice to those on the frontlines of a crisis they did little to cause.

“Just look at Jamaica” he said, referring to the catastrophic devastation caused last week by Hurricane Melissa.

The clean energy revolution means it is possible to cut emissions while growing economies. But developing countries still lack the finance and technologies needed to support these transitions.

In Brazil, countries must agree on a credible plan to mobilize $1.3 trillion annually in climate finance by 2035 for developing countries, he said.

“Developed countries must honour their commitment to double finance for adaptation to at least $40 billion this year. And the Loss and Damage Fund needs to be capitalized with significant contributions.”

COP30 in Belém must be the turning point – where the world delivers a bold and credible response plan to close the ambition and implementation gaps, he said.

“To mobilize the 1.3 US trillion dollars a year by 2035 in climate finance for developing countries; And to advance climate justice for all. The path to 1.5 degrees is narrow – but open.
Let us accelerate to keep that path alive for people, for the planet, and for our common future,” declared Guterres.

Meanwhile New research by Oxfam and CARE Climate Justice Centre, finds developing countries are now paying more back to wealthy nations for climate finance loans than they receive- for every 5 dollars they receive they are paying 7 dollars back. 65% of funding is delivered in the form of loans.

This form of crisis profiteering by rich countries is worsening debt burdens and hindering climate action. Compounding this failure, deep cuts to foreign aid threaten to slash climate finance further, betraying the world’s poorest communities who are facing the brunt of escalating climate disasters, says the joint report.

Some key findings of the report:

    • Rich countries claim to have mobilized $116 billion in climate finance 2022, but the true value is only around $28-35 billion, less than a third of the pledged amount.
    • Nearly two thirds of climate finance was made as loans, often at standard rates of interest without concessions. As a result, climate finance is adding more each year to developing countries’ debt, which now stands at $3.3 trillion. Countries like France, Japan, and Italy are among the worst culprits.
    • Least Developed Countries got only 19.5% and Small Island Developing States 2.9% of total public climate finance over 2021-2022 and half of that was in the form of loans they have to repay. 
    • Developed nations are profiting from these loans, with repayments outstripping disbursements. In 2022, developing countries received $62 billion in climate loans. We estimate these loans to lead to repayments of up to $88 billion, resulting in a 42% “profit” for creditors.
    • Only 3% of finance specifically aimed at enhancing gender equality, despite the climate crisis disproportionately impacting women and girls.

“Rich countries are treating the climate crisis as a business opportunity, not a moral obligation,” said Oxfam’s Climate Policy Lead, Nafkote Dabi. “They are lending money to the very people they have historically harmed, trapping vulnerable nations in a cycle of debt. This is a form of crisis profiteering.”

This failure is occurring as rich countries are conducting the most vicious foreign aid cuts since the 1960s. Data by the OECD data shows a 9% drop in 2024, with 2025 projections signalling a further 9–17% cut.

As the impacts of fossil fuelled climate disasters intensify —displacing millions of people in the Horn of Africa, battering 13 million more in the Philippines, and flooding 600,000 people in Brazil in 2024 alone – communities in low-income countries are left with fewer resources to adapt to the rapidly changing climate, according to the study.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Categories: Africa, Défense

Kaum Ausländer beim Staat – überraschende Kritik aus der Wirtschaft: «Die Bundesverwaltung ist ein goldener Käfig für Schweizer»

Blick.ch - Fri, 11/07/2025 - 00:00
Während in der Wirtschaft ohne ausländische Fachkräfte nichts läuft, ist der Ausländeranteil beim Bund sehr tief. Wirtschaftsvertreter warnen vor einer gefährlichen Kluft zwischen Staat und Privatwirtschaft. Deutschland will gegensteuern. Und die Schweiz?
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

13-Jährige tot auf Schaffhauser Fussballplatz – jetzt reden ihre Eltern: «Asmin starb in meinen Armen»

Blick.ch - Fri, 11/07/2025 - 00:00
Asmin (†13) ist tot. Sie starb unerwartet bei einem Fussballspiel in Schaffhausen, bei dem auch ihre Eltern als Zuschauer anwesend waren. Nun hat ihre Familie mit Blick über den schweren Verlust gesprochen.
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

"APPARENCES" revient sur les écrans de A+ Bénin avec la saison 2

24 Heures au Bénin - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 23:24

A+ BENIN a annoncé, ce jeudi 6 novembre, par la voix de sa directrice générale Cléli AZOKPOTA, le lancement de la saison 2 de "APPARENCES", la série 100 % béninoise, lors d'un événement organisé à Canal Olympia de Cotonou. À cette occasion, les deux premiers épisodes ont été projetés en avant-première, en présence des autorités, des responsables culturels et d'un public passionné de séries télévisées.

Dès le 12 novembre, "APPARENCES" revient sur les écrans de A+ avec une nouvelle saison qui valorise le savoir-faire audiovisuel béninois, tout en mettant en lumière les décors, la mode et la culture du pays.

« Ce soir, nous poursuivons ensemble cette belle aventure. Je tiens à rappeler qu'il s'agit d'une véritable prouesse de produire une série d'une telle qualité technique et éditoriale dans des délais aussi courts. Et nous l'avons réussi ici, au Bénin, ensemble », a souligné Mme Cléli AZOKPOTA.
Elle a ajouté :

« Cette nouvelle saison est le fruit d'un travail exceptionnel, collectif, qui a mobilisé tout l'écosystème local : scénaristes, réalisateurs, acteurs, techniciens, monteurs… Chacun a donné le meilleur de lui-même pour vous offrir ce que vous allez découvrir ce soir. Une saison 2 plus forte, plus intense, qui ne vous laissera pas indifférents. »

Créée par Christiane Chabi Kao en collaboration avec Massamba Ndour, fondateur de MARODI TV, "APPARENCES" réunit une équipe artistique et technique expérimentée, avec une distribution exceptionnelle de comédiens béninois, confirmés et émergents. Coproduite par A+ BENIN et MARODI TV, la série a été réalisée par Pape Abdoulaye Seck et Kismath Baguiri. Elle mobilise plus de 80 acteurs, 600 figurants et 60 techniciens. Au total, "APPARENCES" compte 100 épisodes de 26 minutes, répartis sur deux saisons.

Pour Mme AZOKPOTA, cette série est aussi l'occasion pour A+ BENIN de réaffirmer sa mission : soutenir la création locale, identifier, former et accompagner les talents de demain, aussi bien devant que derrière la caméra.

« APPARENCES est plus qu'une série. C'est une vitrine de la créativité béninoise, de sa culture, de sa mode, de ses décors… et bien au-delà de nos frontières. »

"APPARENCES" sera diffusée à partir du mardi 12 novembre à 15h00, puis du lundi au vendredi à la même heure.

Grande saga familiale, "APPARENCES" plonge les téléspectateurs dans l'univers du textile, du pouvoir et des passions humaines.
Puissante, moderne et addictive, la saison 2 marque le retour d'une fiction béninoise ambitieuse, portée par des talents locaux, dont le dénouement, inattendu et poignant, promet de marquer durablement le public.

Marcel HOUETO

Categories: Afrique, Défense

04 Guichets uniques de protection sociale dotés de barques motorisées

24 Heures au Bénin - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 21:30

Les Guichets uniques de protection sociale (GUPS) situés dans les régions lacustres de Cotonou, Sô-ava, Malanville et Karimama, disposent désormais de barques motorisées. Ces barques ont été mises à leur disposition dans le cadre du programme GBESSOKE.

Ouf de soulagement pour les Guichets uniques de protection sociale qui peinent à se déplacer dans les régions lacustres. Grâce à l'appui du programme GBESSOKE, des barques motorisées ont été mises à leur disposition. L'objectif poursuivi à travers cette action, est de soutenir ces Guichets pour une meilleure accessibilité et faciliter la délivrance des services sociaux aux bénéficiaires du programme.

Le programme GBESSOKE, mis en œuvre par le ministère des affaires sociales et de la microfinance est l'un des programmes phares du gouvernement visant à soutenir les ménages pauvres extrêmes afin de les sortir de la précarité.

F. A. A.

Categories: Afrique, Défense

Dans sa quête de simplification, Ursula von der Leyen poussée à rendre publique son alliance avec l’extrême droite

Euractiv.fr - Thu, 11/06/2025 - 10:03

Le Parti populaire européen (PPE) d’Ursula von der Leyen est contraint de s’allier avec l’extrême droite pour faire passer une réforme visant à simplifier les formalités administratives entourant les chaînes d’approvisionnement. Une alliance embarrassante, que l’extrême droite veut rendre « publique ».

The post Dans sa quête de simplification, Ursula von der Leyen poussée à rendre publique son alliance avec l’extrême droite appeared first on Euractiv FR.

Paris Agreement: the EU submits its updated NDC with an indicative target for 2035 to the UN ahead of COP30

European Council - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 20:41
The Council approved the submission of the EU's updated nationally determined contribution ahead of COP30, reaffirming the EU's commitment to the Paris Agreement and its ambitious climate action goals.
Categories: Défense, European Union

Council agrees position to simplify requirements for chemical products

Europäischer Rat (Nachrichten) - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 20:41
Council agrees position on the ‘stop-the-clock’ mechanism on requirements and procedures for chemical products.

2040 climate target: Council agrees its position on a 90% emissions reduction

Europäischer Rat (Nachrichten) - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 20:41
The Council has agreed to amend climate law to set a 90% emissions reduction target for 2040, with flexibility and conditions to support member states in the transition.

Press release - Gender Equality Week: the way forward for women’s political participation

Europäisches Parlament (Nachrichten) - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 18:43
The need for stronger support systems to make political representation more inclusive across Europe was highlighted by MEPs and experts in a public hearing on Wednesday.
Committee on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality

Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

Press release - ‘My Voice, My Choice’: MEPs support citizens’ initiative on accessible abortion

Europäisches Parlament (Nachrichten) - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 18:43
The Women’s Rights and Gender Equality Committee has adopted a report supporting the Citizens’ Initiative “My Voice, My Choice: for safe and accessible abortion”.
Committee on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality

Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

Press release - Hungary’s rule of law crisis is deepening, Civil Liberties Committee MEPs warn

Europäisches Parlament (Nachrichten) - Wed, 11/05/2025 - 12:33
Warning of persistent threats to the rule of law in Hungary and the continuing deterioration of common values, Civil Liberties MEPs have reiterated their calls for EU action.
Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs

Source : © European Union, 2025 - EP

Regionalverkauf eingestellt: Goldbach Gruppe baut Geschäft um – 65 Jobs weg

Blick.ch - Tue, 11/04/2025 - 11:02
Der Werbevermarkter Goldbach Group streicht bis zu 65 Stellen im Rahmen einer Restrukturierung. Das Unternehmen mit Sitz in Küsnacht ZH fokussiert sich auf sein Kerngeschäft und stellt das Geschäftsfeld Regionalverkauf ein.
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

Höchster Anstieg in Europa: Rekordzahl an Todesopfern auf Schweizer Strassen

Blick.ch - Tue, 11/04/2025 - 10:51
Die Schweiz verzeichnet den höchsten Anstieg an Verkehrstoten in Europa: In den letzten fünf Jahren stieg die Zahl um 34 Prozent auf 250 im Jahr 2022. Die Beratungsstelle für Unfallverhütung fordert dringende Massnahmen.
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

Aufsehenerregender Fall in Bern: Sporttrainer wegen sexuellen Handlungen mit Schülerin verurteilt

Blick.ch - Tue, 11/04/2025 - 10:49
Ein Sporttrainer hatte über zwei Jahre im Kanton Bern sexuelle Kontakte mit einer minderjährigen Schülerin. Die Übergriffe führten zu einer Schwangerschaft. Neben dem Mann wurde auch die Mutter des Mädchens verurteilt. Sie soll eine «Politikerin oder hohe Beamtin» sein.
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

Moralischer Sieger: Das YB-Spiel gegen den FCB im Schnell-Rückblick

Blick.ch - Tue, 11/04/2025 - 10:46
Mit einem Mann weniger und grossen Abwehrsorgen erkämpfte sich YB gegen den FCB ein 0:0. Hier gibts das Spiel im Schnell-Rückblick.
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

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