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Greenpeace calls for faster EV shift at Toyota AGM
At 9 am today Greenpeace East Asia activists gathered outside of Toyota Motor Corporation’s annual shareholder meeting, calling on the automaker to speed up its transition to zero-emission vehicles.
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What’s it like to podcast on climate change in China?
“Numbness doesn’t come from the amount of info available, but more from a sense of powerlessness”
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At shareholder meeting, Greenpeace calls on TSMC to increase renewable energy use
At 8:30 am on June 6, Greenpeace East Asia representatives gathered outside of TSMC’s annual shareholder meeting to call on the chipmaker to increase its use of renewable energy.
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3 things concerning Toyota’s investors ahead of its Annual General Meeting
Countries worldwide are strengthening vehicle emission regulations. In the US, the IRA incentivizes EV sales, and the EPA aims for ⅔ of new cars to be electric by 2032. In Europe, a ban on new fossil fuel car sales is set for 2035. In China, homegrown EV brands like BYD are outpacing foreign automakers, with…
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Automakers have failed to disclose emissions from steel: Greenpeace
Carmakers are pushing the planet past the critical 1.5C heating threshold by not decarbonizing their steel supply chains, according to a new Greenpeace East Asia report.
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Luxshare Precision to target 50% clean energy by 2025: Greenpeace response
Luxshare Precision, a key supplier of Apple and Microsoft, has announced that it will achieve 50% clean energy by 2025.
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Foreign automakers on track to lose market share in China due to slow shift to EVs: study
Volkswagen, General Motors, Toyota, Honda, Mercedes-Benz, and BMW are on track to lose market share in China due to their slow transition to electrified vehicles, according to a new report by Greenpeace East Asia.
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White House says Toyota is ‘fully committed’ to electrifying its fleet: Greenpeace response
Yesterday White House advisor John Podesta said that Toyota Motor Corp. is “fully committed” to electrifying its fleet, according to a Reuters report.
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China has already approved more new coal in 2023 than it did in all of 2021 — Greenpeace
Redoubled coal investment comes at the expense of desperately-needed improvements to China’s electric grid and energy storage capacity that would make it easier for existing capacity to meet periods of high energy demand.