Author: Arnes Biogradlija

Global renewable power capacity is projected to increase by 4,600 GW between 2025 and 2030—equivalent to adding the combined generation capacity of China, the European Union, and Japan to the world’s energy infrastructure—according to the International Energy Agency’s latest assessment. This expansion represents a doubling of deployment from the previous five-year period, yet falls 5% below projections issued just twelve months ago, primarily due to policy reversals in the United States and regulatory adjustments in China that have introduced significant market uncertainty. Solar photovoltaic installations will dominate this growth trajectory, accounting for nearly 80% of new renewable capacity additions through…

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Eurasian Resources Group proceeded with controversial Congolese mineral rights acquisitions worth tens of millions despite internal compliance warnings that transactions showed “unusual nature and size,” raising bribery concerns, according to internal documents. The 2020 Project Passport investigation—triggered after auditors flagged suspicious payments to French intermediary Elie-Yohan Berros—reveals systematic risk tolerance at one of the world’s top five cobalt producers even as the company faced concurrent UK bribery probes. ERG’s compliance and legal heads initiated the internal review in mid-2020 after NGO reports alleged Berros functioned as a proxy for Dan Gertler, the Israeli billionaire sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury in…

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Tata Steel Netherlands faces €685 million in emission allowance purchases between 2024 and 2030, marking a dramatic reversal from the €663 million the company earned selling surplus credits between 2008 and 2019. Internal documents reveal how the European Emissions Trading System’s tightening allocation rules are compounding existing financial pressures on the Dutch steelmaker, which reported combined losses of €761 million over the past two years. The shift exposes fundamental weaknesses in the ETS’s early implementation. For over a decade, industrial emitters received overallocated allowances—a structural flaw that enabled companies like Tata Steel to generate €55 million annually through credit sales…

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The automotive world has a dirty little secret: while traditionalists clutch their pearls over electric conversions, companies like Everati are quietly proving that the future of classic cars isn’t about preserving the past—it’s about revolutionizing it. WATCH THE FULL INTERVIEW HERE When Justin Lunny founded Everrati after watching Prince Harry drive away in an electrified Jaguar E-Type, he wasn’t just starting another EV company. He was declaring war on the combustion engine’s stranglehold on automotive heritage. And the results are nothing short of heretical—in the best possible way. “You’re making a big change when you take away the combustion engine,”…

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Global investment in clean hydrogen has surged from $10 billion in 2020 to $75 billion in 2024, a trajectory that would normally suggest unstoppable momentum. Yet behind the capital inflows, projects are stalling, cost gaps remain unresolved, and infrastructure questions hang over Europe’s ambition to import hydrogen at scale. The experience of Marcel Kooter—who shifted from senior posts at BP and Castrol to co-founding the Holland Hydrogen Hub—illustrates both the promise and the pitfalls. WATCH THE FULL INTERVIEW At present, green hydrogen costs between $5 and $8 per kilogram, compared to less than $2 for gray hydrogen. The economics hinge…

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CATL’s announced sodium-ion battery pricing of $19 per kilowatt hour represents a 65% reduction from current lithium iron phosphate costs of $55-$70/kWh, not the 90% cost decline claimed across social media channels promoting the technology. The Chinese battery manufacturer’s Nextra sodium-ion system achieves 175 Wh/kg energy density while promising 10,000+ charge cycles, positioning it within a sodium-ion market projected to reach $1.82 billion in 2025 from $1.47 billion in 2024, growing at compound annual rates between 16-25% depending on analyst projections. The disparity between promotional claims and verified pricing highlights persistent challenges in accurately assessing emerging battery technologies, where cell-level…

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Europe’s plastics recycling industry is warning of an accelerating crisis as plant closures and investment shortfalls erode its ability to support the EU’s circular economy targets. In a letter to European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, major trade bodies including EuRIC and Plastics Recyclers Europe cautioned that soaring energy costs, regulatory fragmentation, and intensifying global competition are pushing the sector into recession. The warnings come against stark production data. EU plastics output contracted by 13.3% between 2018 and 2022 and fell another 8.3% in 2023, leaving annual production at 54 million tonnes. At the current trajectory, volumes could soon…

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