Mongabay(lean-left)
In public finance, some costs are politely kept off the books. The ocean has long been one of them. Governments often speak of “blue growth” and “sustainable use,” yet many policies still treat marine ecosystems as a kind of free input: available, resilient, and cheap to replace. The result is ecolo
Read full original ›Earth.org(lean-left)
Around the world, traces of pharmaceuticals are increasingly being detected in waterbodies including rivers, lakes, and groundwater, revealing a growing but hidden form of pollution.
The post An Invisible Crisis: The Hidden Environmental Impact of Pharmaceutical Waste appeared first on Earth.Org.
Read full original ›Grist(lean-left)
The administration’s rush to secure the components for the military could benefit renewable energy — someday.
Read full original ›OECD Newsroom
Services trade restrictions stayed high in 2025: Why removing hidden hurdles matters OECD
Read full original ›Breitbart(right)
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr discussed fraud in the federal Lifeline subsidy program during a Breitbart News policy discussion Tuesday, citing a report from the FCC’s inspector general that found more than 94,000 dead people signed up for benefits in California.
The post B
Read full original ›World Bank Blogs
Weekly links March 6: mark-up measurement issues, the origins of inflation targeting, overregulation in Indonesia, solar subsidies, and more… World Bank Blogs
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