Table.Briefings

Feature

Sven Giegold (Grüne) ist Staatssekretär im Bundesministerium für Wirtschaft und Klimaschutz.

Sven Giegold: 'I don't like to argue'

From Attac activist and influential MEP to State Secretary under German minister Robert Habeck: Sven Giegold has had an unusual career. In an interview with Stefan Braun and Malte Kreutzfeldt, he looks back on his first year in the ministry, describes his toughest decision and his secret political passion.

By Redaktion Table

IRA: Vestager proposes concrete changes to state aid rules

Member states are urging to find a response to the Inflation Reduction Act, with which the US government wants to promote eco-friendly technologies. Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager now provides first insights into where she wants to facilitate subsidies for investors.

By Till Hoppe

Facebook decision: getting down to business with the GDPR

For years, the Data Protection Regulation has lacked certainty about what the wording of the law actually means. There are reasons for this – and yet the current case of Facebook, in particular, holds potential for lasting clarification. Because there is a lot at stake for the industry and for the supervisory authorities.

By Falk Steiner

Nature restoration: rapporteur wants higher targets

With the Nature Restoration Law, the EU wants to set a good example globally. But even after the success of the UN Biodiversity Conference (COP15), the dispute over the design continues in Brussels. In his draft, rapporteur César Luena sets higher goals. The opposition was not long in coming.

By Timo Landenberger

Germany's Taiwan policy approaches turning point

One visit to Taiwan by German MPs follows the next – politicians from the Greens, SPD, FDP and CDU outdo each other with declarations of solidarity for the island nation. This intensity is new. Admittedly, this is by no means a formal Zeitenwende for dealing with the status quo. But MPs are already pushing it so far that experts are downright alarmed.

By Felix Lee

After Covid, Marx puts on the brakes

The EU Chamber is back in Brussels after three years of zero-Covid. The delegation's message: The Covid nightmare may be over, but the country's "socialist path" will severely slow down its economic development in the long run.

By Marcel Grzanna

German Supply Chain Act gets off to a tame start

The new Supply Chain Act came into force at the turn of the year. Large companies will be under greater obligation to comply with human rights and environmental requirements. This primarily affects German companies that do business in and with China. But most of them are prepared.

By Felix Lee

Transparency in the EU Parliament: Metsola plans reform

Parliament President Metsola will present 14 proposals today to make the EP more transparent. It is an attempt to polish up the image of the Parliament after the corruption scandal surrounding Eva Kaili. Some of the proposals go a long way, but there are some loopholes.

By Charlotte Wirth

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Davos: climate agenda of the super-rich

The World Economic Forum in Davos will once again bring together leaders of politics and big business. On the agenda are global crises and possible solutions. Amidst the climate crisis, billionaires are increasingly becoming important players – sometimes openly, sometimes discreetly, sometimes for their own benefit. We introduce the biggest donors.

By Bernhard Pötter

NYC: Arrests At BlackRock HQ After Climate Protest Fourteen demonstrators were arrested outside of BlackRock on May 25,

BlackRock's poor climate record

In 2020, BlackRock head Larry Fink wrote in his annual letter to CEOs that the firm would "put sustainability at the heart of its investment decisions." The results after three years, however, are mixed.

By Nico Beckert