This week: GM’s director of sustainability David Tulauskas on the customer-driven future for personal transportation, including full electrification, and anti-slavery charity Unseen’s CEO Andrew Wallis on how business risks on human rights and modern slavery are evolving.
Plus: Shell links executive pay to climate change targets, analysis of the latest Know the Chain labour rights benchmark into the apparel and footwear sector, and Australia’s modern slavery bill becomes law (at last).
And news of an exclusive special offer for podcast listeners (code: IFPOD10).
Hosted by Ian Welsh
Webinar audio: The EUDR Debate: what’s necessary to make it work effectively?
Monday briefing: Global biodiversity framework progress and the EU’s green transition
Weekly podcast - Transparency and targets for sustainable palm oil sourcing
Monday briefing: World Economic Forum descends on Davos
Weekly podcast – What does the apparel sector have in store in 2024?
Is regulation driving effective land, carbon and biodiversity impact measurement?
Monday briefing: CSRD and Veganuary gear up for action
How to put regenerative agriculture into practice
Weekly podcast – Thinking beyond zero deforestation
Weekly podcast: regenerative agriculture, better decision-making, and what the EUDR means for coffee
How is climate change impacting farmers now?
Business action on scope 3 emissions: a US perspective
Weekly briefing: sustainable business forecast for 2024
Weekly podcast – Why measuring land, carbon and biodiversity impact matters
Landscape action: how to scale corporate nature, climate and social impacts
COPwatch: will we be left enthused or deflated?
Weekly briefing: COP28 progress and prospects for EUDR FAQ
Weekly podcast – Reality check: the future of regenerative agriculture
The pathway to nature-positive business: definitions, measurements and targets
Expert insight: future of sustainable commodities and landscapes
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