'Stop Sending These Stained Clothes': Fast Fashion Is Destroying These Cities— and Lives --
See fashion's last stop, the places where your used clothing is harming ecosystems, polluting the environment, and driving often-dangerous markets.
!['Stop Sending These Stained Clothes': Fast Fashion Is Destroying These Cities— and Lives](https://slrpnk.net/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fassets.teenvogue.com%2Fphotos%2F67a4dc3164eaae1429fea723%2F16%3A9%2Fw_1280%2Cc_limit%2FSocial-HEADER-anchor-piece.jpg&format=webp&thumbnail=256)
As we head into fashion month, we’re taking a step forward to also highlight the impact of our clothing with The Last Stop, a package emphasizing the long journey of our discarded clothing and their often forgotten final stage – somewhere across several cities in the Global South where communities are tasked with the brunt of the impact. In this series, we meet upcyclers and resellers who are at the center of the clothing waste crisis, hear from garment workers who know firsthand how much clothing is being made, and we offer steps you can take to help the problem.
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The declining quality of clothing is working in tandem with insatiable consumption habits to exacerbate the global fashion waste crisis. While we are buying more fast fashion than ever — a report released by the United States Slow Fashion Caucus found that in the last eight years, the rate of textile waste grew 50% — clothing is being made with cheaper, fossil fuel-based materials and with poorer construction due to cost-cutting measures at factories. The Slow Fashion Caucus report also pointed specifically to fast fashion brands that are intentionally making cheaper clothes so consumers will continue to buy more and more.
Says Branson Skinner, cofounder of the Or Foundation, a nonprofit based in Accra working on solutions to problems caused by overproduction, “Certain communities have tried to recirculate clothes, but they are getting less and less material they can do that with — which is ultimately impacting the quality of clothes here too.”
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Even with innovative ways to resell or repurpose textile waste, often it’s not enough. More discarded clothing is coming into Accra [in Ghana] than the community can manage. The lack of landfill infrastructure and the fact that recycling solutions for textiles, especially polyester, are poor at best means clothing ends up in the streets, in water systems, and in small neighborhoods where it piles up or gets burned.
In Chile, a massive fire fueled by fast fashion waste sent plumes of toxic smoke into the environment. And in Indonesia, where more than 2.7% of the globe’s textiles are made, garment workers know that the volumes they are tasked with producing contribute to an issue that will harm their own communities, but they have little choice.
This has become a dire issue across the Global South — and it just got more urgent. On January 2, a massive fire tore through the Kantamanto Market, devastating 60% of stalls, including Grace and Janet’s, and taking the livelihoods of thousands of sellers. Sellers have been trying to manage the textile waste that chokes Ghana's shores, but their ability to do so is even more hindered, a disaster for the environment and the families who now have no source of income. ...
"One Step Forward, Two Steps Back:" Digital Rights Group Slams The European Commission's New Draft For The Upcoming eID Wallet
We are constantly fighting for user rights and protection in the upcoming eID Wallet. But the latest draft of implementing acts leaves us torn once again. On the one side the commission adapted important safeguards that we recently demanded in an open letter but at the same time bringing back privac...
![eIDAS: One Step Forward – Two Steps Back](https://feddit.org/pictrs/image/c9cafb45-e460-47b1-932f-67ea464dcfce.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=256)
Download the analysis here (pdf)
The implementation of the regulation for a European electronic identity (EUid) based on digital wallets faces new criticism by digital rights groups. One of them, Austria-based Epic, recently published an open letter, and urged the European Commission to close certain loopholes that would lead to severe privacy and transparency problems.
Soon after the letter, the updated implementing acts seemed like a step in the right direction – "until we discovered completely new weak spots that not only endanger user privacy but also contradict the European Parliament’s agreement," Epicenter says in an analysis.
The Commission's new draft contains "privacy and transparency shortcomings [that] undermine trust in the eIDAS ecosystem and the democratic process as a whole. They must be fixed immediately," Epicenter adds.
>A core pillar of trust in the eIDAS ecosystem is the public relying party registry. This registry is essential to enable oversight by public watchdogs and to ensure transparency. However, the current system makes it nearly impossible to obtain a meaningful overview of how relying parties are using digital identities – undermining the sole purpose of a transparency register.
>The current draft of implementing acts fails to clearly distinguish between cases where a relying party is legally required to identify wallet users and other scenarios where such identification is optional. Practically speaking, the Wallet doesn’t know if it interacts with a bank that has a legal obligation to know who their customers are or Facebook that have no right to identify or track us.
>Since the right to use pseudonyms depends on this distinction, it is critical that relying parties explicitly state whether a legal identification obligation applies to them and based on which law in particular. This lack of clarity cancels out the right to pseudonymity and makes the enforcement nearly impossible.
>Even more concerning are the controversial changes made behind closed doors, after the public consultation process had already concluded, and at the explicit request of powerful industry players. These changes reintroduce a unique, persistent identifier and extend its scope towards the private sector – assigning users a lifelong, unchangeable digital identity number.
>This proposal clearly contradicts the eIDAS regulation. The European Parliament had already drawn a clear red line against such an identifier – and now, it is being reintroduced in an undemocratic manner through an implementing act.
No, DeepSeek isn’t uncensored if you run it locally.
Everything that comes from China is censored, because private companies must apply to the Chinese censorship laws.
Is it really worth it building yet another model?
Yes, it is, and it has to do with independence and many other reasons. It'll be multilingual, legally compliant, it comes without Chinese nor other censorship, it is open source unlike Deepseek, ChatGPT, and others.
The Open Society as an Enemy: A critique of how free societies turned against themselves --
<!-- CLOCKSS system has permission to ingest, preserve, and serve this Archival Unit --> <p style="color:red"><b>Read online or download for free</b></p><p style="color:red"><b>Scroll down to open individual chapters</b></p> <p> Nearly 80 years ago, Karl Popper gave a spirited philosophical defence...
Just started reading this book by J. McKenzie Alexander, Professor of Philosophy in the Department of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method at London School of Economics (LSE), which is free to download as ePub, Mobi, and pdf.
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Nearly 80 years ago, Karl Popper gave a spirited philosophical defence of the Open Society in his two-volume work, The Open Society and Its Enemies. In this book, J. McKenzie Alexander argues that a new defence is urgently needed because, in the decades since the end of the Cold War, many of the values of the Open Society have come under threat once again. Populist agendas on both the left and right threaten to undermine fundamental principles that underpin liberal democracies, so that what were previously seen as virtues of the Open Society are now, by many people, seen as vices, dangers, or threats.
The Open Society as an Enemy interrogates four interconnected aspects of the Open Society: cosmopolitanism, transparency, the free exchange of ideas, and communitarianism. Each of these is analysed in depth, drawing out the implications for contemporary social questions such as the free movement of people, the erosion of privacy, no-platforming and the increased political and social polarisation that is fuelled by social media.
In re-examining the consequences for all of us of these attacks on free societies, Alexander calls for resistance to the forces of reaction. But he also calls for the concept of the Open Society to be rehabilitated and advanced. In doing this, he argues, there is an opportunity to re-think the kind of society we want to create, and to ensure it is achievable and sustainable. This forensic defence of the core principles of the Open Society is an essential read for anyone wishing to understand some of the powerful social currents that have engulfed public debates in recent years, and what to do about them.
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Baltic states Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia to cut Soviet-era ties to Russian power grid this Saturday, joining the western European electricity network
A giant digital clock in the Lithuanian capital, Vilnius, is counting down the hours until the states join the western European power grid. "We are now removing Russia's ability to use the electricity system as a tool of geopolitical blackmail," Lithuania's Energy Minister Zygimantas Vaiciunas said.
Official celebrations are planned across the Baltics, although some consumers worry about disruptions to supply.
Latvia will physically cut a power line to Russia on Saturday and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen is to attend a ceremony with Baltic leaders in Vilnius on Sunday.
"This is the last step in our fight for energy independence. We can finally take matters into our own hands," Vaiciunas said.
The Baltic states were once Soviet republics but are now part of the European Union and key NATO members on the frontier with Russia.
They have been preparing to integrate with the European grid for years but have faced technological and financial issues.
The switch became more urgent after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022
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No new clothes: South Korean climate activist targets hyperconsumption
The app Lucky Sweater provides a platform for users to trade items from their closets with each other
![No new clothes: S. Korean climate activist targets hyperconsumption](https://slrpnk.net/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcdn-attachments.timesofmalta.com%2F96fea1a261eb6c78c171faa63bbb7a6ea74a2f0e-1738750497-31713134-1200x630.jpg&format=webp&thumbnail=256)
Recovering South Korean shopaholic-turned-climate activist Lee So-yeon used to buy new clothes almost daily – until a $1.50 winter coat triggered an awakening that stopped her shopping entirely.
While looking at the ultra-cheap padded jacket at an H&M shop in the United States, where she was working at the time, Lee asked herself how any item of clothing could be sold so cheaply.
The 30-year-old embarked on a deep dive into fast fashion production methods and was horrified at the human, social and environmental toll hyperconsumerism is having on the planet – and on the mental health of women who make and buy cheap clothes.
[...]
The reason the clothes are so cheap, Lee learned, is because the women who sew for companies are paid little, while the business model itself is causing significant environmental harm.
[...]
Lee now organises clothing swaps with her friends and family, and has written a book to promote the idea of valuing garments for “the story behind it”, rather than chasing ephemeral trends.
She is part of a small but growing global movement seeking to promote second-hand clothing and help people – especially women – opt out of the cycle of over-consumption.
The app Lucky Sweater provides a platform for users to trade items from their closets with each other, focussing on sustainable brands, founder Tanya Dastyar [said].
[...]
The European Union and Moldova have agreed on an energy security plan to wean the country off its dependence on Russian gas supplies and integrate it into the 27-nation bloc’s network.
![EU and Moldova agree on an energy security plan to wean the country off Russian supplies](https://feddit.org/pictrs/image/a88a7dee-b709-4423-975f-2f75195fbfcc.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=256)
The European Union and Moldova on Tuesday agreed on an energy security plan aimed at weaning the country off its dependence on Russian supplies and integrating it into the 27-nation bloc’s network.
The EU’s executive branch, the European Commission, said that Moldova would receive 250 million euros ($258 million) this year — 40% of it by mid-April — after Russia’s state-owned energy giant Gazprom cut supplies on Jan. 1.
Daily electrical outages were imposed after hundreds of thousands of people in Moldova’s separatist pro-Russian Transnistria region were left without heating and hot water last month over an alleged $709 million bill for past supplies to Moldova.
The decision by Gazprom, which came into effect a day after a gas transit agreement between Russia and Ukraine expired, halted gas supplies to Transnistria’s gas-operated Kuciurgan power plant, the country’s largest, which provided a significant portion of Moldova’s electricity.
The commission said that its financial package will provide support to consumers in Moldova – a candidate country for EU membership – to help pay their rising electricity bills. Some 60 million euros ($62 million) is earmarked for 350,000 people left in the cold in Transnistria.
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Greenland lawmakers consider a ban on foreign donations to political parties in face of Trump’s ambitions
Greenland’s legislature debated whether to prohibit political parties from receiving contributions “from foreign or anonymous contributors” after President Donald Trump laid out ambitions for the United States to take over the vast island that belongs to Denmark.
![Greenland lawmakers consider a ban on foreign donations to parties in face of Trump’s ambitions](https://feddit.org/pictrs/image/bc4514ae-e7bc-464b-a7dc-bf1360ce2e2d.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=256)
Greenland’s legislature debated Tuesday whether to prohibit political parties from receiving contributions “from foreign or anonymous contributors” after President Donald Trump laid out ambitions for the United States to take over the vast island that belongs to Denmark.
Inatsisartut, Greenland’s parliament, discussed the proposal that would also ban any single party from receiving domestic private contributions that exceed 200,000 Danish kroner (about $27,700) in total, or 20,000 kroner (about $2,770) for a single contributor.
The government of Greenland asked the parliament’s five-member presidency to consider a bill aimed to “protect Greenland’s political integrity” that would take effect immediately.
The bill “must be seen in light of the geopolitical interests in Greenland and the current situation where representatives of an allied great power have expressed interest in taking over and controlling Greenland,” according to a translation of a parliamentary document in Danish outlining the measure.
The move comes ahead of parliamentary elections that must be held no later than April in Greenland.
Kent Fridberg, a senior legal officer at parliament, said he did not know whether any such foreign donors had already contributed to Greenland’s political parties and the idea for the bill was “basically a preventative measure.”
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Fridberg noted Trump’s expressed interest in Greenland — and said some Russian politicians had voiced a similar interest — and that parties on the island are generally funded by public means.
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Here is a much better way for Europe's tech firms to catch up in global AI race (spoiler: a multilingual, fully open source, law-compliant, democratic and homegrown LLM): https://slrpnk.net/post/17978607
?
Back in July 2024, investigators leaked documents showing the correspondence between officers of Russia's foreign intelligence agency (SVR) responsible for “information warfare” with the West. The exiled Russian media outlet published a report on that. It's very illuminating:
The leaked documents, intended for various government agencies, reveal the Kremlin's strategy: spreading disinformation on sensitive Western topics, posting falsehoods while posing as radical Ukrainian and European political forces (both real and specially created), appealing to emotions — primarily fear — over rationality, and utilizing new internet platforms instead of outdated ones like RT and Sputnik. The documents also detail localized campaigns against Russian émigrés, including efforts to discredit a fundraiser for Alexei Navalny's Anti-Corruption Foundation who had moved to the United States.
Is this going to be another misnomer for a model that isn’t actually open? The quote doesn’t give me much hope.
The quote says it will be fully open. What makes you think it will not?
OpenEuroLLM: European AI alliance unveils LLM alternative to Silicon Valley and DeepSeek
As China’s DeepSeek threatens to dismantle Silicon Valley’s AI monopoly, the OpenEuroLLM has launched an alternative to tech’s global order.
![European AI allies unveils LLM alternative to Big Tech, DeepSeek](https://lemmy.zip/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg-cdn.tnwcdn.com%2Fimage%2Ftnw-blurple%3Ffilter_last%3D1%26fit%3D1280%252C640%26url%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fcdn0.tnwcdn.com%252Fwp-content%252Fblogs.dir%252F1%252Ffiles%252F2023%252F05%252FUntitled-design-8-1.jpg%26signature%3Dac0de6bc557543ad4ed177c80d3a079f&format=webp&thumbnail=256)
cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/17978607
> Archived > > ... > > A European alliance has emerged with an alternative to tech’s global order. > > They call their project OpenEuroLLM. Like DeepSeek, they aim to develop next-generation open-source language models — but their agenda is very different. Their mission: forging European AI that will foster digital leaders and impactful public services across the continent. > > To support these objectives, OpenEuroLLM is building a family of high-performing, multilingual large language foundation models. The models will be available for commercial, industrial, and public services. > > Over 20 leading European research institutions, companies, and high-performance computing (HPC) centres have enlisted in the the project. Leading their alliance is Jan Hajič, a renowned computational linguist at Charles University, Czechia, and Peter Sarlin, the co-founder of Silo AI, Europe’s largest private AI lab, which was acquired last year by US chipmaker AMD for $665mn. > > They’re joined by an array of European tech luminaries. Among them are Aleph Alpha, the leading light of Germany’s AI sector, Finland’s CSC, which hosts one of the world’s most powerful supercomputers., and France’s Lights On, which recently became Europe’s first publicly-traded GenAI company. > > ... >
OpenEuroLLM: European AI alliance unveils LLM alternative to Silicon Valley and DeepSeek
As China’s DeepSeek threatens to dismantle Silicon Valley’s AI monopoly, the OpenEuroLLM has launched an alternative to tech’s global order.
![European AI allies unveils LLM alternative to Big Tech, DeepSeek](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/dcb8e03b-03cb-4238-b7d5-1e4fc8646a2a.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=256)
cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/17978607
> Archived > > ... > > A European alliance has emerged with an alternative to tech’s global order. > > They call their project OpenEuroLLM. Like DeepSeek, they aim to develop next-generation open-source language models — but their agenda is very different. Their mission: forging European AI that will foster digital leaders and impactful public services across the continent. > > To support these objectives, OpenEuroLLM is building a family of high-performing, multilingual large language foundation models. The models will be available for commercial, industrial, and public services. > > Over 20 leading European research institutions, companies, and high-performance computing (HPC) centres have enlisted in the the project. Leading their alliance is Jan Hajič, a renowned computational linguist at Charles University, Czechia, and Peter Sarlin, the co-founder of Silo AI, Europe’s largest private AI lab, which was acquired last year by US chipmaker AMD for $665mn. > > They’re joined by an array of European tech luminaries. Among them are Aleph Alpha, the leading light of Germany’s AI sector, Finland’s CSC, which hosts one of the world’s most powerful supercomputers., and France’s Lights On, which recently became Europe’s first publicly-traded GenAI company. > > ... >
OpenEuroLLM: European AI alliance unveils LLM alternative to Silicon Valley and DeepSeek
As China’s DeepSeek threatens to dismantle Silicon Valley’s AI monopoly, the OpenEuroLLM has launched an alternative to tech’s global order.
![European AI allies unveils LLM alternative to Big Tech, DeepSeek](https://feddit.org/pictrs/image/c0ef4c81-64d9-4a9a-bd76-03a37598f19f.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=256)
...
A European alliance has emerged with an alternative to tech’s global order.
They call their project OpenEuroLLM. Like DeepSeek, they aim to develop next-generation open-source language models — but their agenda is very different. Their mission: forging European AI that will foster digital leaders and impactful public services across the continent.
To support these objectives, OpenEuroLLM is building a family of high-performing, multilingual large language foundation models. The models will be available for commercial, industrial, and public services.
Over 20 leading European research institutions, companies, and high-performance computing (HPC) centres have enlisted in the the project. Leading their alliance is Jan Hajič, a renowned computational linguist at Charles University, Czechia, and Peter Sarlin, the co-founder of Silo AI, Europe’s largest private AI lab, which was acquired last year by US chipmaker AMD for $665mn.
They’re joined by an array of European tech luminaries. Among them are Aleph Alpha, the leading light of Germany’s AI sector, Finland’s CSC, which hosts one of the world’s most powerful supercomputers., and France’s Lights On, which recently became Europe’s first publicly-traded GenAI company.
...
Done, sorry.
Sorry, it's corrected now.
As an addition: https://www.4dayweek.co.uk/employers
Send them an application: https://www.4dayweek.co.uk/employers
All the best! :-)
"Effects of climate change outweigh the interests of developers:" UK government green light for two new oilfield permits "unlawful" as it does not take into account CO2 emissions, court rules
cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/17863364
> >A court [in the UK] has ruled that consent for two new Scottish oil and gas fields was granted unlawfully and their owners must seek fresh approval from the UK government before production can begin. > > >The written judgement on the Rosebank and Jackdaw fields [off Shetland] came after a case brought by environmental campaigners, Uplift and Greenpeace, at the Court of Session in Edinburgh. > > >In his judgement, Lord Ericht said a more detailed assessment of the fields' environmental impact was required, taking into account the effect on the climate of burning any fossil fuels extracted. > > >... > > >Shell's Jackdaw gas field in the North Sea was originally approved by the previous UK Conservative government, and the industry regulator, in summer 2022. > > >Permission for the Rosebank oil development, 80 miles west of Shetland in the North Atlantic, was granted in autumn 2023. > > >In a 57-page judgement, Lord Ericht wrote that there was a public interest in having the decision "remade on a lawful basis" because of the effects of climate change - which he said outweighed the interests of the developers. > > ...
"Effects of climate change outweigh the interests of developers:" UK government green light for two new oilfield permits "unlawful" as it does not take into account CO2 emissions, court rules
>A court [in the UK] has ruled that consent for two new Scottish oil and gas fields was granted unlawfully and their owners must seek fresh approval from the UK government before production can begin.
>The written judgement on the Rosebank and Jackdaw fields [off Shetland] came after a case brought by environmental campaigners, Uplift and Greenpeace, at the Court of Session in Edinburgh.
>In his judgement, Lord Ericht said a more detailed assessment of the fields' environmental impact was required, taking into account the effect on the climate of burning any fossil fuels extracted.
>...
>Shell's Jackdaw gas field in the North Sea was originally approved by the previous UK Conservative government, and the industry regulator, in summer 2022.
>Permission for the Rosebank oil development, 80 miles west of Shetland in the North Atlantic, was granted in autumn 2023.
>In a 57-page judgement, Lord Ericht wrote that there was a public interest in having the decision "remade on a lawful basis" because of the effects of climate change - which he said outweighed the interests of the developers.
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U.S. President Trump wants more drilling, but the oil market is already saturated with hundreds of idle oil leases sitting untapped in the Gulf of Mexico
Despite President's Trump directives, oil companies can't drill if there is little market for their product.
![Trump wants more drilling, but the oil market is already saturated](https://slrpnk.net/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgrist.org%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2025%2F01%2FDrillGettyImages-1726482787.jpg%3Fquality%3D75%26strip%3Dall&format=webp&thumbnail=256)
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>Of the 2,206 active leases in the Gulf of Mexico, only a fifth are producing oil, according to records from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, which regulates offshore drilling. Oil industry executives and analysts say the current number of 448 oil-producing leases is unlikely to grow significantly, even if Trump makes good on promises to expand leasing opportunities and expedite drilling permits.
>The market is saturated with oil, making companies reluctant to spend more money drilling because the added product will likely push prices down, cutting into profits.
>“It’s not the regulations that are getting in the way, it’s the economics,” said Hugh Daigle, a professor of petroleum engineering at the University of Texas in Austin. “It’s true that there are a bunch of undeveloped leases in the Gulf, and it’ll stay that way if we continue to see low or stagnant oil prices.”
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Mining giant Rio Tinto says wind and solar make economic sense, but LNP stands in way of its plans to save smelters
Rio Tinto boss says renewables are essential for the future of its assets. But the new Queensland LNP state government may stand in its way.
![Rio Tinto says wind and solar make economic sense, but LNP stands in way of its plans to save smelters](https://aussie.zone/pictrs/image/5a149165-b22c-47aa-b9af-2b6fd09a0d6e.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=256)
>The head of mining giant Rio Tinto has once again underlined his company’s commitment to renewables, but questions remain about the future of its giant smelters and refineries in Queensland after the new LNP state government put a halt to new wind farm approvals.
>The decision by the Queensland LNP – first reported by Renew Economy last week – puts a pause on the approvals of four major wind projects in the state – including the 1.4 gigawatt Bungapan wind project that is essential to Rio’s plans to wean its energy intensive industries off its dependence on coal.
>The decision by the Queensland LNP, which follows their refusal in opposition to endorse the previous Labor government’s renewable energy targets, has rattled many in the energy industry.
>The state has the lowest share of renewables of any in the country, a situation that would have been unchanged even with Labor’s target of 80 per cent renewables by 2030, but the LNP intervention seems sure to make it even more of a laggard.
>...
Probably, and with the new president it is arguably not so easy in the near future for the U.S. I'm afraid.
I am not sure what you want to say. In a nutshell, the article says that the EU must align its energy policies across countries to increase its own manufacturing output and, thus, gaining a higher degree of independence. This is true also for the U.S. and any country or bloc imho.
200 UK Companies Permanently Move To 4-Day Work Week Without Loss Of Pay
In a landmark move reinventing the working week in the United Kingdom, at least 200 British companies have signed up for a permanent four-day working week for all their employees without any loss of pay.
![200 UK Companies Permanently Move To 4-Day Work Week](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/0cb110b9-1e56-4074-bd5f-a6c30cd3229a.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=256)
cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/17862588
> Archived > > >In a landmark move reinventing the working week in the United Kingdom, at least 200 British companies have signed up for a permanent four-day working week for all their employees without any loss of pay. > > >Together, these 200 companies employ over 5,000 people, and among these charities, marketing and technology firms are the best-represented, a report by The Guardian said quoting the 4 Day Week Foundation. > > >... > > >The change was first adopted by around 30 marketing, advertising and press relations firms. The suit was followed by 29 charity, NGO, and social care industry-based organisations, and 24 technology, IT and software firms. Later, another 22 companies in the business, consulting and management sectors also joined the bandwagon and permanently offered four-day weeks to staff, according to The Guardian report.
200 UK Companies Permanently Move To 4-Day Work Week Without Loss Of Pay
In a landmark move reinventing the working week in the United Kingdom, at least 200 British companies have signed up for a permanent four-day working week for all their employees without any loss of pay.
![200 UK Companies Permanently Move To 4-Day Work Week](https://feddit.org/pictrs/image/8df24f26-cfa0-42d0-836a-0802b5fdf892.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=256)
>In a landmark move reinventing the working week in the United Kingdom, at least 200 British companies have signed up for a permanent four-day working week for all their employees without any loss of pay.
>Together, these 200 companies employ over 5,000 people, and among these charities, marketing and technology firms are the best-represented, a report by The Guardian said quoting the 4 Day Week Foundation.
>...
>The change was first adopted by around 30 marketing, advertising and press relations firms. The suit was followed by 29 charity, NGO, and social care industry-based organisations, and 24 technology, IT and software firms. Later, another 22 companies in the business, consulting and management sectors also joined the bandwagon and permanently offered four-day weeks to staff, according to The Guardian report.
Fossil-fuel hacks are lying about renewable energy; don't let them get away with it
![An explanation of how renewable energy saves you money](https://slrpnk.net/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fsubstackcdn.com%2Fimage%2Ffetch%2Fw_1200%2Ch_600%2Cc_fill%2Cf_jpg%2Cq_auto%3Agood%2Cfl_progressive%3Asteep%2Cg_auto%2Fhttps%253A%252F%252Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%252Fpublic%252Fimages%252F13919313-7f21-4003-ae89-87d8d8f5c50c_320x180.jpeg&format=webp&thumbnail=256)
This is an explanation focused on the U.S. market, but it's principles can be perfectly applied to any region.
It is a very good way showing why climate change denials arguing that "renewables are too expansive" is outright wrong.
Expert Says Europe's Solar Manufacturing Revival Hinges On Collaboration Among European Countries As The EU Sets New Record for Renewable Energy Use
PV Talk: ETIP PV chair Rutger Schlattmann discusses why fostering innovation through international cooperation is at the heart of efforts to rebuild Europe’s PV manufacturing sector.
![Revival of European PV manufacturing hinges on innovation through collaboration](https://feddit.org/pictrs/image/1b359882-f021-471c-9eda-031eca503da6.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=256)
cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/17862259
> Archived > > >As the world races to decarbonise its energy systems, Europe faces mounting challenges in competing with global powerhouses like China and the US in PV manufacturing. To address these challenges, the European Technology and Innovation Platform for Photovoltaics (ETIP PV) has emerged as a key player in fostering collaboration, innovation and strategic policymaking among European countries. > > >“PV is a global technology,” Rutger Schlattmann, chair of ETIP PV and head of the Solar Energy division at Helmholtz Zentrum Berlin, tells PV Tech Premium. “The technology is developed worldwide, and some of the effort should be done across countries because these challenges are bigger than what individual countries – especially the smaller ones – can afford.” > > .... > > Meanwhile, the EU sets a new record for renewable energy use in 2024. > > >In the European Union (EU), 47% of electricity now comes from renewable sources like wind and solar, a new record according to a report from the think tank Ember. This is a far higher percentage than in other countries, including the United States and China, where about two-thirds of energy comes from fossil fuels such as oil, coal, and gas. > > >... > > >The share of electricity produced by renewables jumped to 47% last year compared to 34% in 2019, in large part due to strong growth in solar and wind energy. In 2024, 11% of the EU’s electricity came from solar power, 17% from wind, and 24% from nuclear. The share produced by traditional fossil fuels dropped from 39% in 2019 to 29% in 2024.
Expert Says Europe's Solar Manufacturing Revival Hinges On Collaboration Among European Countries As The EU Sets New Record for Renewable Energy Use
PV Talk: ETIP PV chair Rutger Schlattmann discusses why fostering innovation through international cooperation is at the heart of efforts to rebuild Europe’s PV manufacturing sector.
![Revival of European PV manufacturing hinges on innovation through collaboration](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/a6e4906e-a47a-4183-9c1d-69e707d7e742.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=256)
>As the world races to decarbonise its energy systems, Europe faces mounting challenges in competing with global powerhouses like China and the US in PV manufacturing. To address these challenges, the European Technology and Innovation Platform for Photovoltaics (ETIP PV) has emerged as a key player in fostering collaboration, innovation and strategic policymaking among European countries.
>“PV is a global technology,” Rutger Schlattmann, chair of ETIP PV and head of the Solar Energy division at Helmholtz Zentrum Berlin, tells PV Tech Premium. “The technology is developed worldwide, and some of the effort should be done across countries because these challenges are bigger than what individual countries – especially the smaller ones – can afford.”
....
Meanwhile, the EU sets a new record for renewable energy use in 2024.
>In the European Union (EU), 47% of electricity now comes from renewable sources like wind and solar, a new record according to a report from the think tank Ember. This is a far higher percentage than in other countries, including the United States and China, where about two-thirds of energy comes from fossil fuels such as oil, coal, and gas.
>...
>The share of electricity produced by renewables jumped to 47% last year compared to 34% in 2019, in large part due to strong growth in solar and wind energy. In 2024, 11% of the EU’s electricity came from solar power, 17% from wind, and 24% from nuclear. The share produced by traditional fossil fuels dropped from 39% in 2019 to 29% in 2024.