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Norway is on track to be the world's first to launch commercial seabed mining, with its minority government and two opposition parties approving Arctic seabed exploration.
Support for seabed mining represents a strategic shift in resource procurement, addressing Europe's supply of critical minerals for green technologies and reshaping the mining industry's environmental and legislative landscape.
"We need to have a fact- based evaluation of deep sea minerals as a provider of critical minerals for the green energy transition," said Walter Sognnes, CEO of seabed mining startup Loke Marine Minerals.
Parliament’s final decision on full-scale mining awaits, potentially setting a global precedent for seabed mining initiatives and environmental policies.
Environmental concerns loom large, with debates on marine ecosystem impacts and long-term sustainability.
This initiative intersects critical global issues: the need for sustainable sources of minerals for green technologies, the challenge of environmental protection and long-term sustainability, and geopolitical tensions over Arctic resources.
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The Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) has introduced a market maker mechanism trial to invigorate their carbon credit trading market. The mechanism is designed to ensure liquidity by making companies quote a certain volume of buy and sell orders within a price range.
As the world's fifth-largest carbon emitter, Japan is using the carbon credit market strategy to combat climate change. In April, Japan initiated a gradual implementation of a carbon pricing scheme aimed at motivating companies and cities to reduce their emissions in hopes for the country to become carbon neutral by 2050.
Leading global bank, Mizuho Financial Group, has invested in Climate Impact X (CIX), a Singapore-based carbon credit marketplace, to expand the carbon credit market in Asia. The partnership focuses on expanding carbon credit accessibility and reliability, leveraging CIX's advanced technology like satellite monitoring, machine learning, and blockchain to ensure transparency and integrity in carbon trading.
The trial will be a litmus test for the market's viability and could set a precedent for similar initiatives globally.
Japan's cautious approach, contrasting with aggressive carbon pricing in other Asian markets, reflects its unique economic and environmental challenges.
Critics argue that without a compliance market, Japan's carbon credit market may struggle to gain significant traction.
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Sanofi has entered into a partnership with Aqemia, a Paris-based startup specializing in quantum physics algorithms and generative AI for drug discovery. Sanofi plans to use Aqemia’s, spun out of École normale supérieure in 2019, tech to discover small molecules in various therapeutic areas.
The $140 million collaboration taps into the booming AI drug discovery market expected to reach $15.44 billion by 2032, ushering a new era of faster, more effective drug development.
“This whole new step is about scaling our respective expertise to multiple projects and supporting Sanofi in discovering novel chemical matter at scale with our unique technology – including on difficult projects with limited chemical data upfront and hard issues like selectivity,” said Maximilien Levesque, Aqemia CEO and Co-founder.
Sanofi continues to push the boundaries of drug discovery with more AI acquisitions.
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