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Search Result for “timber”

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OPINION

Reform imperative

Postbag, Published on 23/11/2025

» Re: "Police transfers face scrutiny", (BP, Nov 20).

OPINION

The scramble for the world's critical minerals

Oped, Rabah Arezki & Rick van der Ploeg, Published on 07/08/2025

» The world's superpowers have developed a seemingly insatiable appetite for the critical minerals that are essential to the ongoing energy and digital transitions, including rare-earth metals (for semiconductors), cobalt (for batteries), and uranium (for nuclear reactors). The International Energy Agency forecasts that demand for these minerals will more than quadruple by 2040 for use in clean-energy technologies alone. But, in their race to control these vital resources, China, Europe, and the United States risk causing serious harm to the countries that possess them.

OPINION

Americans can't win from trade war by Trump

Oped, Nancy Qian, Published on 12/04/2025

» The world is reeling from US President Donald Trump's "Liberation Day", when he announced the highest US tariffs in more than a century.

OPINION

Seed bomb threat to forest ecology

Editorial, Published on 01/09/2024

» Despite public concern over invasive species like the blackchin tilapia, which is rapidly spreading and threatening river and marine ecosystems nationwide, forest authorities are now putting rainforests at risk by seed bombing with non-native species. This reckless action must stop.

OPINION

Junk carbon offset addiction 'killing the planet'

News, Mark Gongloff, Published on 29/08/2024

» Before This Is Why We Can't Have Nice Things was a Taylor Swift song, it was a punch line to a Paula Poundstone joke from the 1980s about how, as a kid, she once knocked a Flintstones glass off a table, making her mother say, "That's why we can't have nice things."

OPINION

Technology brings SDG goals closer

News, Zhimin Wu, Published on 22/07/2024

» In the face of escalating threats to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030, the global community stands at a crossroads.

OPINION

The art of rolling out the red carpet

Roger Crutchley, Published on 23/06/2024

» Russian President Vladimir Putin appeared to enjoy the red carpet treatment he received in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang this week. Over the years the Russian leader will have become quite familiar with walking on such plush carpets, but one wonders if he knows why they are red.

OPINION

Royal Irrigation Department must change ways

Oped, Editorial, Published on 23/02/2024

» The Royal Irrigation Department (RID) keeps trying to start new megaprojects despite the fact these schemes are often opposed by local residents.

OPINION

Getting historic renovations right

Oped, Atch Sreshthaputra, Published on 09/11/2023

» There has been some good news about the conservation of heritage architecture in Thailand in recent years -- but bad news as well. First, the good part: our society is waking up to the value of heritage. Despite little public funding and weak legal protection, some old buildings and sites are being conserved. Many people, companies and institutions throughout the nation now recognise that preserving our historic architectural resources improves our economy, communities and quality of life.

OPINION

Human success in the AI age

Oped, Jamie Metzl, Published on 21/09/2023

» Everywhere we look nowadays, we find warnings that artificial-intelligence algorithms are coming for our jobs. While Goldman Sachs estimates that two-thirds of all current jobs in the United States and Europe could be "exposed to some degree of AI automation" in the coming years, a report from Pew Research Center puts the figure at closer to one-fifth -- with a special emphasis on jobs requiring a college education.