EU Pushes China As Competitor, Not “Developing Country”
When it comes to clean technology, German Chancellor Angela Merkel says China is no longer seen as a developing country but a competitor.
When it comes to clean technology, German Chancellor Angela Merkel says China is no longer seen as a developing country but a competitor.
It was a victory for climate change action and support for the Paris Climate Agreement, for sure. But the G20 Communique at the end of the Hamburg summit was much more than that: A statement about sustainability, income inequality, and human rights as well.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, arguably one of the currently most influential leaders in the world, and most certainly one of the more respected, has issued a shot across the bow of Donald Trump’s nascent US leadership in advance of next week’s G20 summit next week, raising the specter of a public and contentious clash over the protectionist and isolationist policies of the United States, in particular its stance on climate change.
In a whirlwind journey to meet with her counterpart Dilma Rousseff in Brasilia, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany cemented an … [continued]
On the sidelines of the Hannover Messe industrial trade fair in Germany this year, the results of a survey conducted by the global … [continued]