The Earthshot Prize 2022 is a global prize designed to incentivize change and help to repair our planet by awarding five winners each year for their contributions to environmentalism. This year’s Innovation Summit featured finalists selected by the Earthshot council in addition to panelist speakers from heads of state, grassroots organizations and tech leaders. This special Bloomberg program highlights the event’s biggest interviews and news makers.
Insight and analysis of top stories from our award winning magazine “Bloomberg Businessweek”.
Sanjay Shah used an obscure loophole to go from unemployed trader to $700 million whale in just a few years. Now regulators are after him for what they consider the biggest tax heist in European history.
Turkey’s Oil Tanker Backlog Is Starting to Clear
Japanese Company’s Lander Rockets Toward Moon With UAE Rover
BOE Divisions on Rates Set to Deepen With UK Stagflation Outlook
The 24 Hours of Hikes That End Year of Fighting Inflation
Biden Cements Trump-Era Steel, Aluminum Tariffs in WTO Snub
This Robot Is on a Mission to Eliminate Short Car Trips
FIFA Charges Argentina for Disorder At World Cup Match
Elon Musk Steps Up Attacks on Twitter’s Former Safety Head
Twitter Relaunches Twitter Blue Monday With Two-Tiered Pricing
Telstra Says Database Issue, Not Hacking Led to Privacy Breach
Ukraine Latest: Germany Pledges Weapons; UK Doubtful on Talks
Doctors ‘Disappointed’ After Streeting Takes Aim at ‘Hostile’ BMA
Griffin Strikes Deal for Potential New Citadel NYC Skyscraper
Lennar Offers 5,000 Homes to Investors With Buyer Demand Sliding
Light Heavyweight Title Remains Vacant After Draw in UFC 282
Crawford Knocks Out Avanesyan in 6th Round, Keeps WBO Title
Russia Is Feeling the Pain of Europe’s Oil Embargo
Tesla’s Semi Finds a Sweet Spot
How to Save Your Job from ChatGPT
Royal Caribbean CFO Says Experience Seekers Are Fueling Comeback
The High Price of Bad Business: Corporate America’s Biggest Settlements
Some Bosses Embrace Work From Home to Keep Wages Down
Pioneering Black Feminist Dorothy Pitman Hughes Dies at 84
Domestic Abuse Charity in Palace Racism Row Halts Activities
Scientists Lower Alert for Mauna Loa, Say Eruption Could End
Snow and Ice Hit Parts of UK as Cold Conditions Set to Continue for Days
How the Parking Garage Conquered the City
A DC Homeless Shelter With Many Faces
You Can Get Everything Delivered in NYC — Even Legal Weed
US Probes FTX Founder for Fraud, Examines Cash Flows to Bahamas
This Week in Crypto (Podcast)
Crypto’s Amber to End Chelsea Sponsorship, Axe Over 40% of Jobs in FTX Fallout
Priscila Azevedo Rocha
Subscriber Benefit
Subscribe
Sign In
Extreme hot weather has exposed flaws in England’s water system — and could make it harder for the country’s unpopular, privatized utilities to borrow money on the public markets.
UK water companies normally issue new bonds in the second half of the year, as firms return to debt markets after a summer slowdown. This year, however, investors are ready to demand higher yields, especially for providers lagging behind on their leakage targets.