AFP
19848 articles published since 08 Mar 2022
19848 articles published since 08 Mar 2022
Vernon Hollingsworth grew up in Florida among his family's orange trees, recently ravaged by a double whammy of disease and a hurricane that have sent juice prices spiraling and left farmers blinking in disbelief. In Florida, the world's second largest producer of orange juice after Brazil, groves have been suffering from a citrus tree disease called Huanglongbing (HLB) for the last 17 years.
Breakthrough climate laws passed by Australia on Thursday will target the nation's worst polluters, forcing coal mines and oil refineries to curb emissions by about five percent each year. Aluminium smelters, coal mines, oil refineries and other large polluters will be forced to cut their emissions by 4.9 percent each year.
China's economy showing 'strong momentum', says Li
Painters in a Chinese village once known for churning out replicas of Western masterpieces are now making original art worth thousands of dollars, selling their own works in a booming domestic art market.
Asian markets were mixed Thursday following a recent run-up, with banking sector worries easing and traders weighing central banks' interest rate plans in the wake of the recent turmoil. The announcement this week lifted China's tech sector on hopes a long-running crackdown was nearing its endgame.
Shunning his smartphone for a "dumb" one changed the way Jose Briones engages with the world -- and he likes it that way. Briones is far from alone in reconnecting with the analog world by relying less on finding life's solutions via the internet on his phone.
The problem with mobile phones is that people look at them too much. As for the problem of people gawping at their phones too much -- even as they cross the road -- he's not worried.
The first crewed flight of Boeing's Starliner space capsule to the International Space Station (ISS) will take place in July, Boeing and NASA officials said Wednesday. The CST-100 Starliner mission, which had previously been planned for April, will take place no earlier than July 21, the officials said.
Longtime Starbucks leader Howard Schultz defended the coffee chain's confrontational approach to unionization Wednesday, while insisting it had not violated US labor law in countering the campaign.
AFP
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