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Page 5 - ஆஸ்திரேலிய கூட்டாட்சியின் நீதிமன்றம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

ESG Focus: It s Easy Being Green - For Now

10:40 AM FNArena s dedicated ESG Focus news section zooms in on matters Environmental, Social & Governance (ESG) that are increasingly guiding investors preferences and decisions globally. For more news updates, past and future:  ESG Focus: The Name’s Bond – GSS Bond The green, social and sustainable use-of-proceeds bonds market is staging an invasion of the traditional bond market and, while it’s early days, the bridgehead has been claimed. – -The name’s bond – green bond -Pricing, risk and the waning greenium By Sarah Mills The green, social and sustainability (GSS) use-of-proceeds bond markets have paved the way for the broader sustainability-linked finance market, which is expected to extend its tentacles across every business in the world over the next two decades. 

Who sues for the trees—and the air that we breathe?

Will recent climate victories in the courtroom actually lead to steeper emission cuts?  July 8, 2021 Judges have started stepping in where regulators fear to tread, delivering high-profile victories to activists who have sued on behalf of nature and future generations. The idea of assigning legal rights to nature, which seemed a pipe dream for decades, seems to be gaining traction. As the New York Times noted in its recent obituary for Christopher Stone, his influential 1972 book Should Trees Have Standing? “long seemed out of step with legal reality, but that has begun to change.” In 2017, courts in New Zealand bestowed legal “personhood” on the Whanganui river and granted the Maori people standing to file protective lawsuits. Likewise, India deemed the Ganges and theYamuna rivers to have the same status as “living human entities” and, last year, Bangladesh did the same for all rivers within its borders.

Children s rights on climate change

Children’s rights on climate change Pix for representational purpose only. COURTS worldwide are beginning to respond to the escalating climate change calamities. Governments, environment ministers and corporations are being held liable to account for deleterious greenhouse gas emissions, in actions filed by groups of civil society and even children. The Netherlands Court struck first in Milieudefensie et al v Royal Dutch Shell plc (“Shell”), which declared that corporations are obliged to limit and address the human rights impacts incurred by their activities, business relationships and supply chain, from the manufacturing to end-user stages. It promptly ordered Shell to reduce its net greenhouse gas emissions by 45% by the end of 2030, compared to 2019 levels, so as to be in alignment with the country’s commitments under the Paris Agreement on Climate Change

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