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EU vows to crack down on greenwashing with new rules for labels

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EU vows to crack down on greenwashing with new rules for labels

Naturally sourced. Earth pleasant. 100% natural. Cruelty free. Bio.

These are some examples of the 230 environmental labels that may at the moment be discovered stamped on services offered throughout the European Union.

However can all these labels be trusted?

Not fairly.

In line with estimates launched by the European Fee, round 53% of environmental claims made by corporations include “obscure, deceptive or unfounded” info, whereas 40% are “fully unsubstantiated.”

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Greenwashing – a misleading advertising technique used to disguise items beneath a faux veneer of local weather neutrality – is rampant throughout the bloc, as a plethora of labels, manufacturers and designations confound customers and blur the road between sustainable and polluting.

Civil society and activists have for years urged stronger motion to clamp down on this phenomenon, which is believed to have elevated in reputation and class because the severity of the local weather disaster exacerbates.

With this in thoughts, the European Fee unveiled on Wednesday a brand new algorithm that can compel corporations to again up their inexperienced claims with credible scientific proof.

Corporations that want to stamp an environmental label might want to bear an impartial verification course of earlier than putting their items on grocery store cabinets. 

This info should be simply accessible for customers to allow them to perceive what lies behind the manufacturing chain. For instance, although a QR code or web site hyperlink.

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“We would like, to start with, customers to get reliable info, which is constant and verifiable,” Virginijus Sinkevičius, the European Commissioner for surroundings, stated on Wednesday whereas presenting the plans.

“We would like environmental labels which might be extra clear and, after all, simpler to know.”

‘Separate fact from fiction’

The brand new regulation, dubbed Inexperienced Claims Directive, will neither create a unified EU-wide label nor ban present ones. As a substitute, it should harmonise the necessities that apply to the lots of of environmental labels presently available on the market.

Including an environmental label will proceed to be a enterprise choice on the discretion of corporations. But when they select to take action explicitly, they might want to observe the directive’s pointers.

People who ignore the foundations and persist of their greenwashing practices can be liable to penalties, equivalent to financial fines, confiscation of revenues and the momentary exclusion from public procurement.

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“Corporations, they routinely use environmental claims to market their items, and, after all, when customers see these claims, it is extraordinarily troublesome to separate fact from fiction,” Sinkevičius stated.

The EU’s official Ecolabel can be spared from the foundations as a result of it already complies with the third-party verification standards.

The laws proposed on Wednesday will now enter negotiations between member states and the European Parliament earlier than coming into into drive.

Chatting with the press, Sinkevičius urged that “most” of the inexperienced labels presently unsubstantiated will disappear after the directive is transposed however he averted giving a precise quantity.

 The European Environmental Bureau (EEB) welcomed the directive as a “promising device to wipe out the deceptive claims that muddy the waters of sustainability” however regretted the dearth of a clear-cut ban on inexperienced claims connected to merchandise with hazardous chemical substances.

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France overseas residents begin voting in second-round of elections

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France overseas residents begin voting in second-round of elections

Sunday’s legislative elections in mainland France will be decisive, with parties fighting to steal votes from a strong far-right force.

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Voters in France’s overseas territories and living abroad started casting ballots Saturday in parliamentary run-off elections that could hand an unprecedented victory to the nationalist far right.

Marine Le Pen’s anti-immigration party National Rally came out on top of first-round voting last Sunday, followed by a coalition of centre-left, hard-left and Greens parties – and President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist alliance in a distant third.

The first polling stations opened in Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon at noon Paris time this Saturday. In the territory’s only constituency, Stéphane Lenormand, who came well ahead of the others on the right, will face Frédéric Beaumont of the Socialist Party.

Elsewhere, residents of French Guiana, Saint-Barthélemy, Saint-Martin, Guadeloupe, Martinique, French Polynesia and French citizens living on the American continent will start voting in the afternoon. The second round in New Caledonia will start at 10 p.m. Paris time. French citizens living abroad were also able to vote by Internet on Wednesday and Thursday.

The elections wrap up Sunday in mainland France. Initial polling projections are expected when the final voting stations close at 8 p.m. Paris time, with early official results expected late Sunday and early Monday.

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Macron called the snap legislative vote after the National Rally won the most votes in France in European Parliament elections last month.

The party, which blames immigration for many of France’s problems, has seen its support climb steadily over the past decade and is hoping to obtain an absolute majority in the second round. That would allow National Rally leader Jordan Bardella to become prime minister and form a government that would be at odds with Macron’s policies on Ukraine, police powers and other issues.

Preelection polls suggest that the party may win the most seats in the National Assembly but fall short of an absolute majority of 289 seats. That could result in a hung parliament.

Macron has said he won’t step down and will stay president until his term ends in 2027, but is expected to be weakened regardless of the result.

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Biden Calls Debate 'Bad Episode' in ABC News Interview

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Biden Calls Debate 'Bad Episode' in ABC News Interview
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. President Joe Biden again called his debate against Donald Trump “a bad episode,” suggesting in an interview with ABC News on Friday that his shaky performance was due to poor preparation, exhaustion and illness. “No indication of any serious condition. I was exhausted. I …
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NATO takes on AI as the next great theater of war

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NATO takes on AI as the next great theater of war

Artificial Intelligence (AI) has become the next great domain in the theater of war, and NATO allies have made it a top priority as they look to bolster the alliance’s collective defense.

A summit in Washington, D.C., next week will not only commemorate the 75th anniversary of the alliance but will focus on safeguarding NATO in an increasingly hostile geopolitical sphere. 

The global consequences of the war in Ukraine have been far-reaching, and the deepening divides between the West and top authoritarian adversaries has had an effect on everything from defense to trade. 

At the core of how NATO is looking to safeguard itself in challenging times is change in AI technology.  

BATTLEFIELD DEMANDS SPARK AI RACE IN UKRAINE AS WAR WITH RUSSIA RAGES ON

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A UJ-22 Airborne (UkrJet) reconnaissance drone prepares to land during a test flight in the Kyiv region Aug. 2, 2022, prior to being sent to the front line.  (Sergei Supinsky/AFP via Getty Images)

The reliance on drones in kinetic warfare drastically ramped up with the conflict in Ukraine, prompting an AI race and the need for evolving offensive and defensive strategies.  

“There should be concern about countering Chinese and Russian AI capabilities in wartime, but concern should not be mistaken for despair,” said retired Rear Adm. Mark Montgomery, a senior fellow at The Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

“Just as there are reasons for concern in countering Chinese and Russian kinetic weapons — such as hypersonic maneuvering cruise missiles — the U.S. has the ability to build effective offensive and defensive systems to deter and, if necessary, defeat adversary actions,” he added.

In March, NATO more than doubled its tech accelerator sites under a program known as Defense Innovation Accelerator for the North Atlantic (DIANA), which works with private and public companies to develop “deep technologies” to address the alliance’s defense challenges.

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Under DIANA, there will be testing sites in 28 of the 32 NATO nations in a move to support innovation across the alliance in AI, cyber, 5G, hypersonic and autonomous systems.

But the vast expansion of AI capabilities means the alliance is also looking to establish guardrails, particularly when it comes to AI use in wartime. 

Zelenskyy standing, Biden sitting

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, left, receives applause from NATO members, including British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, center, and U.S. President Biden ahead of a meeting of the NATO-Ukraine Council during the NATO Summit in Vilnius July 12, 2023.  (Doug Mills/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)

PUTIN, XI MEET TO BOLSTER ALLIANCE AGAINST WEST AHEAD OF NATO SUMMIT

“There will be doctrinal discussions at NATO on making sure that we don’t have ‘SKYNET’ take over and start engaging in kinetic action without humans making decisions,” former NATO Assistant Secretary General for Defense Investment Marshall Billingslea told Fox News Digital. 

“As drones become increasingly sophisticated, while remaining inexpensive, and as people introduce artificial intelligence into drones for attack, there is a need for a comparable level of AI that has to get incorporated into countering UAS [unmanned aircraft systems], as well as theater missile defense capabilities,” he said.

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Billingslea said AI is already being used effectively by the U.S. when it comes to intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, but that is now being expanded throughout NATO.

As the alliance looks to ramp up its collective defense, its AI initiatives are aimed at not only collecting security and intelligence data from all partner nations, but utilizing that intel more efficiently by offloading the human burden of analyzing it.

Iran drones Ukraine

Firefighters work after a drone attack on buildings in Kyiv, Ukraine, Oct. 17, 2022. (AP Photo/Roman Hrytsyna, File)

RECORD NUMBER OF NATO MEMBERS REACH DEFENSE SPENDING GOAL AS UKRAINE WAR PERSISTS

AI in kinetic warfare is not the only area that has NATO on high alert. 

Propaganda has long played a role in wartime, but the use of disinformation campaigns and malware have become key tools in soft-war operations that can be widely employed using AI, making AI-augmented soft-war tactics a significant challenge to counter. 

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“The area of greater concern for me is the use of AI to improve malign influence operations during peacetime or in a crisis buildup,” Montgomery said. “Russia and China have both demonstrated a willingness to operate in the gray zone to a much greater degree than the U.S. and its democratic allies. As a result, Chinese and Russian AI-infused malign influence operations could have a significant negative impact.”

Dependence on Chinese systems has long been debated between the U.S. and its European allies, though Beijing’s ties with Moscow has prompted many in Europe to cut ties with Chinese digital infrastructure companies. 

The war in Ukraine has highlighted NATO’s need to safeguard its members and partner nations, particularly non-NATO countries in Europe and in areas like the Indo-Pacific, from threats posed by AI technologies.

Xi Jinping and Putin toast during dinner

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping toast during their dinner at The Palace of the Facets in Moscow, Russia, March 21, 2023. (Pavel Byrkin/Sputnik/Kremlin Pool Photo/AP)

“There’s a coalition of authoritarians that NATO has to deal with, and that is China, Russia, North Korea and Iran,” Montgomery said, pointing to how all four have not only positioned themselves against the West but have done so, in part, by backing Moscow with military and economic aid for its war in Ukraine.

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“From my perspective, Ukraine is on the front line of fighting all four of these authoritarian regimes. NATO better step up to support it,” he added. 

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