From the wealth of nations to the health of nations
A new report sets out a blueprint for a European wellbeing economy.
Social Europe is an award-winning digital media publisher driven by the core values of freedom, sustainability, and equality. These principles guide our exploration of society’s most pressing challenges. This archive page curates Social Europe articles focused on ecological issues, offering a rich resource for innovative thinking and informed debate.
A new report sets out a blueprint for a European wellbeing economy.
A draft directive on sustainability reporting begins to address the challenge of turning the corporate tanker towards a zero-emissions 2050.
Amid much rhetoric of a green recovery, only about a quarter of associated spending in Europe fits the bill—despite the benefits.
Markets are an unreliable guide for navigating a problem as large and complex as climate change.
Adam Tooze writes on the roadmaps to net-zero by 2050. Is a just transition for Europe realistic?
Under the European Green Deal, venture-capital firms are expected to play a vital investment role—one for which they are singularly ill-suited.
Better regulation is benevolent and participatory, cognisant of complexity and future-oriented. Deregulation it is not.
While doing all it can to arrest climate change, the EU must place workers and their concerns at the heart of its adaptation strategy.
Karin Pettersson is impressed by a fictional account of the existential challenge humanity faces.
The European Green Deal rests on the commitment of the 27 member states. The fate of the renewable-energy directive shows the scale of that challenge.
With environment issues rising quickly up the EU agenda, it’s time to get trade and ecological policies into coherent alignment.
If the EU does not address its role in domestic deforestation it will never reach its goal of carbon neutrality.
Having squandered past opportunities and shirked previous commitments, we now must start making up for lost time.
The irony of genuinely ‘free trade’ is only regulation enables it. Europe cannot lead the ecological transition without recognising this.
Public development banks will be critical to global efforts to ‘build back better’. They should complement their climate investments with nature-based goals.
Unions can be torn between mitigating climate change tomorrow and saving jobs today. A significant Just Transition Fund could ease that dilemma.
Executive remuneration packages not only drive a race to the top but do not account for companies’ environmental ‘externalities’. This needs to change.