www.nytimes.com/2025/11/17/b...
And here we go again...Meanwhile AI companies warn against the AI bubble bursting...
@cabelfrage
Reader in Global Political Economy, University of Liverpool. Interested in financialisation, Green Finance, Post-Growth and Circular Economy. Working with Liverpool City Council to engineer the Green Transition. Enjoys family, fun and tennis. πΈπͺLiving inπ¬π§
www.nytimes.com/2025/11/17/b...
And here we go again...Meanwhile AI companies warn against the AI bubble bursting...
Very interesting. Steel in the new world order: www.nytimes.com/2025/07/25/b...
Is this our new reality? A re-elected Trump, confident and without shackles.
Liverpool City assigned the first accelerator city by the UN. The hard work continues to speed up the Green Transition!
www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...
www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...
Britain Is Cutting Taxes Again. Why Now? www.nytimes.com/2024/03/07/b...
Private or public solutions to funding the Green Transition?
www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...
Neoliberal financialisation has reduced margins to the extent that household debt is increasing rapidly in Sweden. I and Markus Kallifatides have been writing about this process and its emergent consequences for some time. Take a look, if you are curious.
www.dn.se/ekonomi/skul...
Interesting legal developments in relation to the emission considerations for granting permission to drill for oil and gas.
www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...
It also appears as if hydrogen is a way in which the Global North envisages getting OPEC countries onboard (see IRENA reports).
With regards blue and maybe green hydrogen, oil producing countries see it as a greenwashing opportunity, but also perhaps a way to expand their portfolio and maybe also transitioning away from fossil fuels, that is if they can't avoid it altogether.
Thanks for your reflections on this. We have been reading about the political economy of hydrogen (of all colours) and think that you are very right about this. It appears to be very much the agenda for the EU and its neighbourhood policy.
This is wild and disturbing, but when you think about it not surprising.
#wasteful capitalism
#circular economy
www.nytimes.com/2024/01/15/u...
Trump winning Iowa caucus this straightforwardly seems to be further evidence if US hegemonic decline (in case we needed further such...).
#UShegemonicdecline
#polycrisis
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
The "human behavioural crisis", caused by "deliberate exploitation of human behaviour" by corporations vying for consumers' attention, has resulted in "ecological overshoot". We require resources equivalent to 1.7 earths causing Earth to become uninhabitable and threatens peaceful human relations.
Appalling, whatever the reason may be.
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
www.esa.int/Applications....
But the picture is of course more complex than new trees versus old growth forests with regards CO2 absorption. While treelings cannot absorb so much CO2 yet, it appears as if middle-aged trees (50-140 years) absorb more CO2 than old trees (in which CO2 is already stored).
This data may not consider reforestation. Yet, reforestation cannot replace the ecological systems of old-growth forests and their related social relations. Sweden is interesting. Despite reforestation, old growth forests are being destroyed at a high rate. Also, young trees absorb much less CO2.
I like this little navigation by Federico Savini of the concepts circulating in discussions on how to tackle climate change in cities.
"If combined with degrowth, ... the circular economy concept can offer a powerful trajectory for material reduction"
ontgroei.degrowth.net/post-growth-...