pollution

Who will pay the price of sustainability? - THE EDGE SINGAPORE

Sustainability

Who will pay the price of sustainability?

There will be winners and losers from the ESG revolution, a form of disruption akin to the industrial revolution.

Fitness

Stay fit as pollution drops

Five-minute workouts work just as well and air quality has improved during lockdown

Sunpower receives Deloitte's inaugural 'Best Managed Companies' award in China

SINGAPORE (Mar 25): Sunpower Group has been lauded as one of China’s Best Managed Companies (BMC) by big four accounting firm Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu through its BMC programme, a global initiative recognising private companies with advanced management

China Focus

The biggest threats to China's economy in 2018

BEIJING (Jan 2): China starts three years of " critical battles" against debt, poverty and pollution in 2018 as policy makers also face rising US interest rates, renewed trade-war threats, and nuclear saber-rattling from North Korea.

Is Hong Kong or Singapore a better city for expats?

HONG KONG (June 29): In the race to lure talent for global firms’ regional headquarters, Hong Kong and Singapore have long been neck-and-neck. While many companies make their managers locate in one or the other city — often depending on whether their

Trump cedes climate policy leadership to Xi with Paris accord exit

HONG KONG (June 2): President Donald Trump’s decision to quit the Paris accord has just handed China’s President Xi Jinping a golden opportunity to burnish his country’s image as a clean-energy innovator and global leader in the drive to avoid possi

Tech

These 5 innovations could change your life in the next 5 years

SINGAPORE (Jan 6): IBM has identified five innovations that will likely impact how people perceive the world, improve health diagnoses and protect the earth, all within the next five years.
Smog in China

China Focus

China’s airpocalypse paves a path for new cancer medicines

BEIJING (Jan 6): The thick haze of pollution blanketing northern China this winter is a grim reminder of the nation’s new growth industry: lung cancer drugs.
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