To achieve net zero emissions in Southeast Asia, addressing the significant financing gap is crucial, requiring bold targets and more international support.
Enough time has been lost arguing “jobs versus climate” – the transition to renewable energy is now rightly understood as an economic opportunity, rather than a detrimental trade-off.
Women from climate-vulnerable countries face devastating impacts and are disproportionately affected by disasters, which is why they must be included in the UN’s Loss and Damage Fund.
At COP29, focus shifts to climate adaptation, balancing mitigation efforts with local resilience strategies.
How can its energy systems transition to become climate-smart, to withstand extreme weather, while also protecting social and economic priorities?
There’s still more we can do within the Australian Sustainable Finance Strategy to help meet critical company sustainability goals.
From natural seawalls to mangroves, countries are starting to combat climate change with nature-based solutions. COP28 might drive more of these efforts.
A new teaching program is aiming to develop the responsible decision-makers of tomorrow, ready to tackle some of the most pressing global challenges.
If the world genuinely wants to reach some semblance of “sustainable development”, it needs to start listening more to the concerns of youth and marginalised populations.
With the global shift in corporate sustainability, what will it take to ensure Indonesian businesses rise to the challenge?
The uncomfortable truths that make some disability inclusion barriers so hard to shift, leaving structural inequity entrenched.
The global trade in arms is worth more than two trillion dollars. A UN conference aims to bring more oversight to this deadly industry.
The recent TramLab collaboration examines the issues impacting safety and perceptions of safety for women and girls on Victorian public transport.
To address climate change, we need to apply the same urgent large-scale response we have to COVID-19, and the key to achieving that is to listen more closely to the fury of youth.
Limiting global warming to 1.5°C is increasingly the “new norm”, but what does it mean for Australian state, territory, and corporate climate commitments?
Wasting food feeds climate change, but relatively small changes can make a big difference. Here are six to try,
Five years after the pivotal Paris Climate Accords, a new report looks beyond the numbers to ask what’s really happening in key countries – including Australia.
Australia has abundant wind and solar resources to provide large quantities of cost-competitive green hydrogen. A new tool can show the way forward.
Higher education is failing to equip future corporate captains with the skills needed to implement the United Nations' SDGs, but there's a way forward.
The discarding of barely-worn clothes is wasting our natural resources and contributing to our greenhouse emissions.
Australia has an opportunity to design a recovery strategy that strengthens our resilience to future shocks and ensures the country’s long-term, sustainable prosperity.
Manjula Lee has developed a breakthrough monitoring tool that helps governments and corporations support sustainable development programs.
Our experts provide tips and information for those who want to better understand and embrace the idea of planetary health.
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