Reshma Saujani told a generation of girls that if they gained coding skills, they would be halfway to a productive, fulfilling career. In her new book, "Pay Up: The Future of Women and Work," the Girls Who Code founder admits the cards are still stacked against those girls — and only systemic change can provide true equity.
Why it matters: Saujani's new tome offers a powerful counterweight to the notion that the biggest thing standing in the way of women's success is a skills gap and that women don't have to make sacrifices to advance in their careers.
The Biden administration is enlisting former Trump officials on Monday to convince Congress to pass legislation bolstering America’s semiconductor industry.
Why it matters: Officials believe the bill will make American manufacturing more competitive with China. By coordinating with Trump officials, the Biden team is trying to depoliticize and add urgency to the legislation.
Oil field services companyBaker Hughes became the latest American oil company to walk back its planned investments in Russia, the company announced on Saturday.
Driving the news: Baker Hughes' announcement came a day after its rivals, Halliburton Co. and Schlumberger, took similar steps in response to U.S. sanctions on Russia, ABC News reports.
There isn't much consistency in how companies measure their targets. A lot of them rely on carbon offsets — but that doesn't reduce the actual emissions they create.
Over the past decade, net zero emissions targets have become mandatory for a company to be taken seriously on sustainability.
Why it matters: Net zero targets could produce real progress toward reducing greenhouse gas emissions within the next few decades — assuming the targets will actually be met and not leave out important factors like the emissions from using a company's products.
Jobs and working conditions around the world are being altered by the effects of climate change and efforts to limit global warming.
The big picture: Companies and countries are expected to create millions of new jobs over the next few decades as they take steps to reduce carbon emissions.
Pressure on big companies to disclose and slash carbon pollution is spawning a hot growth industry: sophisticated emissions accounting services.
Why it matters: Precisely tallying greenhouse gas output — and crafting strategies for reducing it — requires complex data gathering and analytics that many companies aren't equipped to do in-house.
New climatedisclosure regimes are being put in place around the world, setting expectations for how companies will do business as climate change threatens everyone and everything on the planet.
Why it matters: A company's role in spewing more greenhouse gas emissions and its exposures to climate risks are becoming key metrics in the evaluations conducted by investors, customers, and the public.
Good afternoon, and welcome to the first installment of our new Climate Truths Deep Dive series, which shows how climate change affects nearly everything in our lives.
Companies have been volunteering in droves to cut their greenhouse gas emissions to "net zero" within the next two to three decades.
Yes, but: A lack of a standard definition of what "net zero" actually means for corporations — and the absence of a regulatory entity that can enforce the pledges — means investors, government officials and consumers are unable to discern greenwashing from genuine commitments.