The market’s huge net-zero carbon targets aren’t off to an important begin

A majority (up to 85%) of the emissions from a barrel of oil come when transportation, such as your car, is driven, according to Carbon Tracker. It’s a stark example of how difficult the net-zero goal will be for companies, but far from the only one.

Red Huber | Tribune News Service | Getty Images

Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler is moving the market regulator closer to requiring carbon disclosures from companies as investor concerns about the material impact of climate change on financial performance continue to escalate.

Major companies, including Apple, are on board. Apple’s vice president of environment, policy and social initiatives, Lisa Jackson, who is a former Environmental Protection Agency administrator, backed a comprehensive carbon disclosure requirement in April.

But in Gensler’s recent outline of his thinking on how to go about mandating carbon disclosure, he made an important caveat: The SEC may still opt to not include Scope 3 emissions in any forthcoming regulation.

That’s an indication of just how hard it is for companies to track all Scope 3 emissions, the greenhouse gas emissions of other companies in a company’s value chain. But it is also an admission that if it’s “code red for humanity” in slowing climate change, the corporate world has not come nearly far enough in recent decades in figuring out how to track carbon emissions through the entire supply chain. And that is a point of frustration for climate experts who have been working on science-based carbon targets, tracking and accounting for decades.

In a speech he gave in late July, Gensler noted that some companies currently provide voluntary disclosures related to what’s called Scope 1 and Scope 2 greenhouse gas emissions. Scope 1 emissions are the direct emissions from a company’s operations, owned or controlled sources. Scope 2 refers to how corporations measure indirect emissions from purchased or acquired electricity, steam, heat and cooling.

But Gensler noted many investors are looking for information beyond Scope 1 and Scope 2, to Scope 3. “Thus, I’ve asked staff to make recommendations about how companies might disclose their Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions, along with whether to disclose Scope 3 emissions — and if so, how and under what circumstances,” the SEC chair said.

Majority of industrial carbon emissions are Scope 3

That “whether to disclose” looms large because the majority of carbon emissions from industrial sources don’t occur in Scope 1 and Scope 2 but in the Scope 3 emissions furthest away from a company’s operations. Carbon Trust research shows that for most companies, Scope 3 emissions represent from 65% to 95% of a company’s broader carbon impact.

But it would put the SEC in line with the existing GHG Protocol — which provides tools for businesses to track and calculate emissions and advises all organizations to quantify Scope 1 and 2 emissions when reporting and disclosing GHG emissions. It says Scope 3 emissions quantification is “optional” even though it notes that Scope 3 emission sources may represent the majority of an organization’s GHG emissions.

Being the largest source of emissions means Scope 3 is also the broadest opportunity for carbon reduction. And it implies that as more companies set ambitious targets for carbon reduction and the “net zero” goals in the decades ahead, there will be no way to hold them accountable if Scope 3 tracking and disclosure does not improve.

“Companies will eventually be held accountable for these targets, and they usually include Scope 3, so this has to be solved,” said Cynthia Cummis, director of private sector climate mitigation for the World Resources Institute.

Other climate experts are even less confident.

“They are not ready for this,” said Angel Hsu, assistant professor of public policy and the Environment, Ecology and Energy Program at the University of North Carolina and founder of the Data-Driven EnviroLab. “It is frustrating and surprising,” said Hsu, who worked on the GHG Protocol. “If companies are not reporting Scope 3 they are missing a huge part.”

Apple and Exxon and carbon reduction

Many companies are reporting to the level of Scope 3 already, and the standard has been available for roughly a decade. According to investor sustainability advocate Ceres, over 3,000 companies have reported Scope 3 under the Carbon Disclosure Project. 

Apple’s embrace of emissions reporting would include Scope 3, according to the company, though the statement was not explicit.

ExxonMobil released Scope 3 emissions for the first time in 2021 but noted that the data “is less certain and less consistent because it includes the indirect emissions resulting from the consumption and use of a company’s products occurring outside of its control.” In disclosing the number — 540 million tonnes of CO2 from upstream production, to be exact — the oil giant took multiple digs at the accounting, also stating that “Scope 3 emissions do not provide meaningful insight into the company’s emission-reduction performance and could be misleading in some respects.”

Some companies also have begun to develop their own approaches to Scope 3, and behind the scenes they have questioned the approach from the “academics and NGOs” that developed the original methods, which companies worry could force them to push supply chain partners to change, rather than work in coordination to reduce their carbon footprint. 

Climate advocates such as Ceres aren’t buying that but say there is more work to be done across the many companies that don’t report on Scope 3 yet.

“It does involve emissions outside of the control of a company in the supply chain and does require engagement with suppliers,” said Steven Clarke, director of corporate clean energy leadership at Ceres. “And we do know suppliers, particularly small and medium-sized ones, are overwhelmed by requests from bigger partners.” 

One example is industrial giant Honeywell, which earlier this year announced its own Scope 3 carbon accounting and coordination project for its supply chain. The company also noted the effort provides an opportunity for it to sell its own energy efficiency products to the supply chain.

Ceres officials say the corporate-led approach is becoming more common and not just within one company’s supply chain but among competitors, too. That has led to things like the Sustainable Apparel Coalition, with companies within a sector coming together on Scope 3 targets. They are acknowledging they don’t know how to meet the requirements today, but since they all use the same contract manufacturers and logistics providers it makes sense to come together to develop technology and engage suppliers so they are not overburdened with surveys and questions.

“We are getting good ambitious commitments, but the realty is Scope 3 is a challenging area to measure and that puts people off,” said Tom Cumberlege, who leads Carbon Trust’s work on value chains. “What Scope 3 really means as far as a main effort is the gap between pledges and calculation. Once it is measured, we’re only at the starting line of action.”

“Retailers say they desperately need to figure out science-based targets, that customers are demanding it,” he said. “It is definitely there and significant in the marketplace.”

Net zero can’t happen without changed supply chains

The efforts are increasing across sectors, too, with coalitions such as Transform to Net Zero, in which Microsoft and Starbucks were among the companies that came together in 2020, and the Amazon-led Climate Pledge.

“The data is still hard to ‘wrap their heads around’ for many companies,” Clarke said, but “if you want to thrive in a decarbonized future, you need to address it.” 

Cummis noted it’s not as if a ton of work hasn’t been done already. There are 600 valid Scope 3 targets aligned with the GHG Protocol — she was part of the team that developed them. She is most frustrated that there is still an imbalance between the data and the demand, and it is one that has to be fixed for the carbon reduction targets that companies are issuing to be verified.

“We assumed 10 years ago we were creating demand for high transparency data and supply chains, and the companies would be willing to pay for the data, and data providers would generate it, or trade groups,” she said.

While the action is picking up, from tech giants such as SAP to start-ups such as Persefoni, so far, Cummis said, third-party databases offering broad estimates for sectors and kinds of businesses are more common. “It is fine to get an estimate to understand a relative proportion of emissions by activity, but now we have targets and we have to track progress, and it is hard to use average emissions databases for that.” 

You don’t even know if you’re on a path to net zero without better data.

Cynthia Cummis, director of private sector climate mitigation for the World Resources Institute

It is not a surprise to the climate experts that some companies are trying to figure out the best way to tackle Scope 3 on their own, and companies such as Apple and Amazon and its Climate Pledge may be up to the challenge, but that also runs the risk of falling short of the collective action that will be required.

“Amazon wanting to lead on this would be great, because they cover so many product categories,” Cummis said. “But whatever they develop needs to be fully open source so others can have access to the data as well. It will be a higher quality tool that’s more usable if it’s developed in partnership with other companies in the value chain and not just at the retailer level.”

Food, energy emissions climate challenges

The challenges food companies face are a good example. Their biggest emissions sources come from primary suppliers such as farms where it is difficult to get data, and so they may not know what farms are buying and how to trace those inputs, especially when it comes to commodities.

In work it did with the GHG Protocol, Kraft found that 90% of its emissions were from the supply chain and at the Scope 3 level.

“If there were tools to support them, that would be helpful,” Cummis said, “but the farmers need more incentives, and there are many middlemen in there too if they are buying commodities. It’s not buying direct.”

The oil and gas sector is one of the more stark examples of the Scope 3 issue. 

According to Mike Coffin, oil and gas analyst at Carbon Tracker, 85% of the emissions from a barrel of oil come when transportation, such as your car, is driven. When you look at a company like ExxonMobil, Scope 1 and Scope 2 together are a minority of total emissions.

“We really look at it from that lens, and upstream oil and gas companies, whatever targets they do, need to be done on an absolute basis rather than intensity of operations basis,” he said.

Companies from ExxonMobil to Royal Dutch Shell can reduce emissions intensity by adding renewables — which is becoming a bigger part of their climate strategy — or low carbon to the mix, but they are still providing the same amount of CO2 emissions.

“We think it’s crucial that any goals have an absolute basis rather than just intensity basis, but getting their heads around that means producing less of their core product,” Coffin said.

Occidental, seen as an early leader among U.S.-based oil and gas companies on carbon strategy, is still going to fall far short of the mark unless its most ambitious carbon capture technologies are proven.

“Say Oxy reduces emissions intensity by 50%, it’s still just 50% of that 15% that is Scope 1 and does nothing for the 85%,” Coffin said. “The planet doesn’t care about how much energy is used but [about] reducing CO2, and that’s why it is critical to have absolute targets.”  

BP has said it will reduce emissions on an absolute basis, and that can only mean one thing: producing less oil and gas. “That’s what we need,” Coffin said. “Reducing Scope 3 for them is moving away from being an oil and gas producer, and it’s really the only option they have, just become smaller or do something else in renewables, or whatever. It doesn’t matter, maybe give money back to shareholders.”

The clock is ticking

Where the corporate world stands today in terms of carbon emissions disclosure is pretty simple.

Scope 1 and Scope 2 a company must know. How much refrigerant it is buying and the electricity it is using, which they get a bill for every month, is the easy part.

Scope 3 remains complicated, but it could be solved faster if there were more effort. “It’s a solvable problem,” Cummis said.

But so far, even if more players, and some of the right players, are stepping up they haven’t stepped forward fast enough.

“For too long we’ve said if the Apples, Walmarts and Amazons support this it will happen,” she said. “We’ve made great progress in getting companies to measure Scope 3 and set science-based targets, but there is a big gap in data quality.”

Even if the net zero targets are laid out over decades, the clock is ticking today.

The real crunch time, according to Cumberlege, will come in the decade between 2030 and 2040, the net-zero goal for many companies. But that timeline makes him critical of what they are doing today to “realistically and programmatically” tackle the data challenge.

“Lots of companies have spent lots of effort collecting data and setting targets,” Cumberlege said. “But they are really only at the start of the race in terms of the effort needed on how data informs the decision-making and what the business would look like in a net-zero world and how to transform the supply chain to fit with that.”

The near-term science-based targets need to be measured over a 5- to 15-year timespan, not 20 to 25 years, for companies to be on a path to net zero. “But you don’t even know if you’re on a path to net zero without better data,” Cummis said. 

Hsu said she is encouraged by the fact that the companies now reporting on Scope 3 are no longer the extreme exception to the rule. But the fact that most companies do not mention Scope 3 explicitly in net-zero commitments and the fact that the total number of companies reporting Scope 3 is “nowhere near complete” leave her concluding carbon disclosure will remain an area of major uncertainty.

Research in recent years from the Carbon Disclosure Project on companies reporting Scope 3 showed that even among this group, the data covered less than one-quarter of Scope 3 emissions.

Andrew Behar, a shareholder advocate and CEO of As You Sow, which has long led climate disclosure efforts among investors pressuring companies, and who is involved in the Say on Climate initiative, says using the 2050 net-zero target as an example — which is the timeline for many companies — means a net 50% reduction by 2030, because once the low-hanging fruit is taken care of, the percentage goals get harder to reach. “That means 5% every year for the next 10 years, and it means Scope 3, and they need to actually report that.”

But he does see the message getting through at some big companies. A recent vote at GE to require net-zero goals and Scope 3 emissions on products including traditional power generation, jet engines and wind turbines received 98% support, and the company announced last month it is moving forward with the plan. “It’s real, and they are going to do it,” Behar said.

There is a chicken-or-egg issue among the broader set of companies in the slow pace of progress, which is part of what makes it challenging to solve.

“Part of the problem is we can’t expect all the companies to follow through until all the data is available, and we can’t get all the data until more companies disclose,” Hsu said.

Treasury yields fall regardless of Fed taper discuss

U.S. Treasury yields fell on Thursday morning, despite the Federal Reserve’s latest policy meeting minutes showing that the central bank was preparing to taper bond purchases this year.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell nearly 4 basis points to 1.233% at 4 a.m. ET. The yield on the 30-year Treasury bond gave up 4 basis points, falling to 1.87%. Yields move inversely to prices.

Minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee’s July policy meeting, released on Wednesday, showed that central bankers were making plans to pull back bond purchases before the end of 2021.

“Looking ahead, most participants noted that, provided that the economy were to evolve broadly as they anticipated, they judged that it could be appropriate to start reducing the pace of asset purchases this year,” the minutes stated.

However, FOMC members stressed that employment had not met the “substantial further progress” benchmark the Fed set before it would consider raising interest rates.

John Plassard, deputy director at asset manager Mirabaud, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Thursday that he believed that FOMC members were “still data dependent.”

Plassard explained that it was important to remember that the FOMC meeting took place before strong U.S. payroll figures for July came out, the University of Michigan’s latest data showed a “crash” in consumer sentiment and retail sales missed expectations.

Plassard said the minutes gave a “very mixed message” which was something he didn’t like, as he was expecting “more clarity” from the FOMC members.

In terms of data due out on Thursday, the Labor Department is due to release weekly jobless claims data at 8:30 a.m. ET. Economists polled by Dow Jones expect a total of 365,000 claims were filed in the week ended Aug. 14, slightly below the total of 375,000 the prior week.

Auctions will be held on Thursday for $35 billion of 4-week bills, $30 billion of 8-week bills and $8 billion of 30-year Treasury inflation-protected bonds.

— CNBC’s Jeff Cox and Yun Li contributed to this market report.

New Zealand central financial institution rate of interest choice after Covid lockdown

Workers and shoppers eat on the steps of Freyberg Place in downtown Auckland, New Zealand, on October 29, 2020, enjoying the freedom of Covid-19 Alert Level 1.

Lynn Grieveson | Newsroom | Getty Images

New Zealand was widely expected to become the first advanced economy to raise interest rates, but the central bank left rates unchanged on Wednesday after one Covid case led the country to announce a nationwide lockdown a day earlier.

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand said in a statement the decision to hold rates at 0.25% was made “in the context of the Government’s imposition of Level 4 COVID restrictions on activity across New Zealand.”

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern imposed a nationwide lockdown when the first Covid case in six months was discovered in Auckland, the country’s largest city.

The city will be under lockdown for seven days starting Wednesday, while the rest of the nation will observe a three-day lockdown. Level 4 restrictions are the highest in the country and the most restrictive, where people must stay home and can only leave only for essential services.

‘Knife-edge situation’

As of Wednesday morning, the number of cases detected had risen to seven and were confirmed to be the highly transmissible delta variant, according to Reuters.

Paul Bloxham, chief economist for Australia and New Zealand at HSBC called it an “extraordinary 24 hours,” and a “very touch and go knife-edge situation.”

“This morning …we find that it’s delta (variant), and, you know, at that point 24 hours ago, the market was thinking that the RBNZ wouldn’t just deliver 20 but 25 (basis points),” he told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia.”

Before Wednesday’s rate decision, Michael Gordon, acting chief economist for New Zealand at Australian bank Westpac, said he did not expect a rate increase.

“The key here is that the Government cannot be confident about the scope of the (Covid) problem,” he said in a note on Tuesday, after Ardern’s lockdown decision.

Analysts mostly expected the central bank to raise rates, at least until the lockdown was announced. The majority of the 32 economists polled by Reuters expected the central bank to raise the official cash rate by 25 basis points from a record low to 0.50%.

Most central banks globally have slashed rates to record lows in a bid to prop up their pandemic-hit economies. Governments around the world have been injecting stimulus into their economies to support businesses. 

But New Zealand has been among the most successful in the world to keep their Covid cases in check with tough lockdowns and shutting of its borders.

Major central banks in the APAC region are in no rush to start hiking policy rates … with the exception of New Zealand and Korea.

Maxime Darmet

Fitch Ratings

Due in part to its zero-Covid strategy, the number of Covid cases has so far been kept at about 2,500 cases, including 26 deaths — among the lowest in the world.

That’s helped the economy to bounce back, with data showing first-quarter economic growth this year was above expectations. It was mainly driven by strong retail spending, falling jobless rate, and soaring housing prices.

The combination of minimal Covid restrictions and generous stimulus has led to a booming economy and rising inflation, leading analysts to expect higher interest rates.

NZ dollar drops

The New Zealand dollar fell to 0.6944 against the U.S. dollar on Wednesday.

The currency has been falling since the lockdown announcement on Tuesday, from above the 0.70 level to above 0.69.

Bloxham said the New Zealand dollar could recover once the Covid situation is contained.

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“If (the lockdown) is sufficient to get the virus contained, to keep the numbers small and push it right back to zero … then you’d imagine in a few weeks time … the economy’s back on track and likewise there’d be sort of upside to the New Zealand dollar,” he told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia.”

New Zealand still likely to hike rates

With the expected hike now derailed, analysts said it would now depend on the scale of the virus situation.

“Regardless of the economic case for higher interest rates, there is nothing to be gained from pushing the (official cash rate) higher now, rather than waiting for more clarity on the Covid situation,” Gordon of Westpac said.

He said that experience showed economic activity tends to bounce back once restrictions were lifted. “When that happens, the RBNZ will be left facing many of the same issues as before: an economy that is running up against cost pressures and capacity constraints, with risks that inflation could become more persistent,” he said, adding that hikes will still be needed.

Meanwhile, Maxime Darmet, Asia-Pacific director of economics at Fitch Ratings told CNBC that most major central banks in the region are not likely to raise rates soon.

“Major central banks in the APAC region are in no rush to start hiking policy rates … with the exception of New Zealand and Korea. Generally contained inflationary pressures and Covid-related economic setbacks leave APAC central banks willing to keep policy loose,” Darmet said in an email to CNBC on Tuesday, before New Zealand’s lockdown was announced.

U.S. forces can not help People flee to Kabul airport, Pentagon chief says

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin speaks during a media briefing at the Pentagon, Wednesday, Aug. 18, 2021, in Washington.

Alex Brandon | AP

WASHINGTON – The Pentagon on Wednesday acknowledged that it does not currently have the capability to safely escort Americans in Kabul to the airport for evacuation as the Taliban consolidate control in Afghanistan’s capital.

“I don’t have the capability to go out and extend operations currently into Kabul,” Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said when asked about those who cannot reach the gates of Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul because they are behind Taliban checkpoints.

“And where do you take that? How far can you extend into Kabul and how long does it take to flow those forces in to be able to do that,” Austin said.

The Defense secretary’s admission comes after the U.S. Embassy in Kabul issued a dire warning to U.S. citizens there stating that it “cannot ensure safe passage” to the airport.

Read more on the developments in Afghanistan:

The U.S. is relying on an agreement with the Taliban to guarantee the safe passage of Americans. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman said earlier Wednesday that “it appears that the Taliban’s commitment for safe passage for Americans has been solid,” while noting she doesn’t know “every case.”

Austin vowed that the U.S. is “going to evacuate everybody that we can physically and possibly evacuate and we’ll conduct this process for as long as we possibly can.” The Pentagon chief said the U.S. is coordinating with the Taliban to create passageways for people to get to the airfield.

U.S. Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters the airport is currently secure with nearly 5,000 U.S. troops on the ground and the Taliban “are not interfering with our operations.” However, the situation “is still volatile and can change quickly,” Milley said.

Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley pauses while speaking during a media briefing at the Pentagon, Wednesday, Aug. 18, 2021, in Washington.

Alex Brandon | AP

“There are threats we are closely monitoring and if at any moment we can identify a specific threat we will take immediate military action without any hesitation in accordance with our rules of engagement. The Taliban and every other organization in that country knows it,” the general said.

“We are the United States military, and we will successfully evacuate all American citizens who want to get out of Afghanistan. They are our priority No. 1,” Milley said alongside Austin.

The general, when asked about extracting people behind Taliban lines with troops, said the military has the “capability to do other things if necessary,” but said executing such an option is a “policy decision.”

“In addition, we intend to evacuate those who have been supporting us for years, and we are not going to leave them behind. And we will get as many out as possible,” Milley added.

In a letter, Senators Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Mitt Romney (R-UT) urged the U.S. not to forget journalists and support staff in Afghanistan and to ensure evacuation flights for them continue.

Addressing Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas, the two senators said there are an estimated 200-plus journalists and support staff, with their families, still seeking to evacuate Afghanistan.

The New York Times tweeted late Wednesday night that “our brave colleagues in Afghanistan made it to safety.” The publication said 65 families — or 128 men, women and children — were headed to freedom.

The State Department acknowledged that the Taliban are apparently blocking some Afghans from reaching the airport.

“We have seen reports that the Taliban, contrary to their public statements and their commitments to our government, are blocking Afghans who wish to leave the country from reaching the airport,” Sherman said.

Milley said the Pentagon is currently averaging about 20 sorties of cargo aircraft evacuation flights every 24 hours. Sherman said 2,000 people have been evacuated in that period, and the State Department will soon invite 800 Afghan special immigrant visa holders to board flights to the U.S.

“I did not nor did anyone else see a collapse of any army that size in 11 days.”

U.S. Army Gen. Mark Milley

chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

The Pentagon confirmed Tuesday that U.S. Central Command chief Marine Corps Gen. Kenneth McKenzie had been in regular contact with Taliban leaders. Pentagon spokesman John Kirby declined to provide further details of those talks. There have yet to be any high-level talks between the Pentagon and the Afghan military since the country’s collapse, Kirby added.

Despite being vastly outnumbered by the Afghan military, which has been assisted by U.S. and NATO coalition forces for the last 20 years, the Taliban entered Kabul on Sunday.

Within hours, Taliban insurgents seized the presidential palace in a stunning development that saw the exodus of now-deposed Afghan President Ashraf Ghani. On Wednesday, the United Arab Emirates confirmed that Ghani was living in exile within the kingdom.

CNBC Politics

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In separate news briefings, President Joe Biden and NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg placed the blame squarely on the Afghan national government for the dramatic and swift Taliban takeover.

From the Pentagon, Milley offered his perspective.

Milley said that while some U.S. intelligence assessments had found that an outright Taliban takeover was possible, the timeframe varied from “weeks, months and even years” after the U.S. withdrawal.

“I did not nor did anyone else see a collapse of any army that size in 11 days,” Milley said.

Lizzo talks concerning the criticism she’s confronted after the discharge of her newest single

Lizzo is known for a variety of things, including catchy anthems that are known to rise to the top of the charts. She is also known as an advocate of body positivity and the embrace of the skin you are in. With the release of her latest single, Rumors, there was some critical feedback that led Lizzo to show her vulnerable side to her fans on emotional Instagram Live.

Now she speaks to Good Morning America about the critics and the message she hopes her music can help her audience.

During her interview, Lizzo said, “I have nothing against criticism of my music, not even the fat comments. Sometimes I just find it unfair how people like me are treated. “

She continued, “People say, ‘Don’t let them see you with their heads down.’ My head is always up. Even when I’m upset and crying, my head is up. But I know that my job as an artist is to reflect sometimes, and that shouldn’t fly. That shouldn’t be okay. “

Sharing that black women have suffered marginalization over the years, Lizzo would feel like it could have been deleted without the presence of social media, adding, “But I chose not to deny and I made up my mind to be loud and “I made up my mind to be great.”

. @ GMA EXCLUSIVE: @lizzo addresses the hurtful messages she received after releasing her song # Rumors with @iamcardib: “I know it’s my job as an artist to think sometimes and that shouldn’t fly. That shouldn’t be okay. “@JujuChangABC reports. Https://t.co/Tqry0s1dH2 pic.twitter.com/0qAfujDByV

– Good Morning America (@GMA) August 18, 2021

As we previously reported, Lizzo released her new single “Rumors” with Cardi B, as well as the song’s music video while addressing the rumors surrounding her. Despite some negative feedback, Lizzo shared some trust to inspire others.

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TSR STAFF: Jade Ashley @ Jade_Ashley94

61% of People did not pay federal revenue taxes in 2020, says the Tax Coverage Heart

John Ewing | Portland Press Herald | Getty Images

More than 100 million U.S. households, or 61% of all taxpayers, paid no federal income taxes last year, according to a new report.

The pandemic and federal incentives resulted in a huge increase in the number of Americans who either owed no federal income tax or received tax credits from the government. According to the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, 107 million households owed no income tax in 2020, up from 76 million – or 44% of all taxpayers – in 2019.

“It’s a really big number,” said Howard Gleckman, a senior fellow at the Tax Policy Center. “It’s really ephemeral too.”

Gleckman said the main reasons for the surge – high unemployment, extensive economic controls and generous tax credits – would largely end after 2022, so the proportion of non-taxpayers would start to decline again from next year.

The percentage of Americans who do not pay income taxes is expected to remain high this year at around 57%, according to the Tax Policy Center. It is expected to drop back to 42% in 2022 and stay at around 41% or 42% through 2025, “assuming the economy continues to recover and several temporary tax breaks expire as planned,” Gleckman said.

Although fleeting, the large number of non-taxpayers will fuel the debate in Congress about higher taxes for the rich. Many Democrats say the rich are not paying their fair share, citing a number of recent articles in ProPublica showing that billionaires like Jeff Bezos and Carl Icahn did not pay federal income taxes in certain years. The $ 3.5 trillion reconciliation bill in Congress is expected to include increases in capital gains taxes, a higher top ordinary income rate, a higher corporate tax rate, and other measures aimed at those earning $ 400,000 or more.

Some Republicans argue that the tax structure is already progressive and relies heavily on the income of a small group of high earners and corporations at the top, while many Americans pay little or no tax. The percentage of Americans who do not pay federal income taxes has been about 44% over the past decade, according to the Tax Policy Center.

The top 20% of taxpayers paid 78% of federal income taxes in 2020, up from 68% in 2019, according to the Tax Policy Center. The top 1% of taxpayers paid 28% of taxes in 2020, up from 25% in 2019.

For 2021, Congress increased the child tax credit, earned income tax credit, and child and dependent tax credit – removing federal taxes for millions of American families.

No household earning less than $ 28,000 will pay federal taxes this year due to the loan and tax changes, according to the Tax Policy Center. About 43% of middle-income households do not pay federal income tax.

Income tax equalization payments last year for many families in terms of dollars have been small, Gleckman said.

“Imagine if someone owed $ 1,500 in income tax in 2020 until they received two stimulus payments – $ 1,200 in April and $ 600 in December,” he said. “That put them in the non-payers category. While the payments resulted in a large percentage increase in their after-tax income, the dollar amount of their tax cut was only a tiny fraction of a high-income applicant who received a tax cut from. got, say, $ 30,000 in 2017 [Tax Cuts and Jobs Act]but still owed some taxes. “

Federal income taxes do not include wage taxes. The Tax Policy Center estimates that only 20% of households have not paid federal income tax or wage tax. And “almost everyone” paid a different form of tax, including state and local sales taxes, excise taxes, property taxes, and state income taxes, the report said.

China floods, climate disasters damage insurance coverage business: S&P and Fitch

Rescuers evacuate stranded people in the waterlogged urban area of Weihui City in Xinxiang, central China’s Henan Province, July 27, 2021.

Li An | Xinhua News Agency | Getty Images

Severe rainstorms and flooding in China are hurting the profits of insurance companies, and highlight the shortfalls of the country’s natural disaster insurance system.

Flooding in Henan last month resulted in a record single-event insurance loss of $1.7 billion, impacting companies that provide property and casualty insurance, according to a S&P Global Ratings report which tracked losses as of Aug. 3.

The central province of Henan experienced its highest recorded rainfall since 1951, when the first records were available, state weather officials said.

Flooding and mudslides in the region claimed over 300 lives, reported state-backed tabloid Global Times. More than 1 million hectares of crops were damaged, and over 35,000 houses were destroyed across the province, state news agency Xinhua reported, citing official data. Direct losses of over 133.7 billion yuan ($20.63 billion) were incurred, the report said.

“We expect insurance claims from the (Henan) flooding … to exceed CNY8 billion ($1.23 billion), or about 0.7% of China’s total non-life direct premiums written in 2020,” Fitch Ratings said in a report dated July 27.

“Fitch believes the flooding losses will be material to the insurance industry as reported claims have continued to surge,” the report said.

Role of insurance in China

For decades, China has been plagued by natural disasters like hurricanes, earthquakes and floods.

In addition to the Henan floods, more than 80,000 people in Sichuan province were also evacuated earlier this month due to heavy rains and floods.

However, insurance still plays a weak role in China’s compensation for catastrophic loss system, according to a World Bank report.

Compensations for losses related to catastrophic events have largely relied on government relief programs and public donations — insurance claims make up less than 1% of direct economic losses in large scale disasters, the report said.

According to S&P, insurance companies are not factoring in the frequency of these calamities and continue to use outdated models to sell insurance packages.

Adding to that, there is a lack of public awareness and Chinese citizens are not willing to accept disaster insurance, a separate study on social factors and insurance shows.

The problem with underinsurance can be addressed on two levels, S&P said.

From an individual perspective, S&P predicts that the record level of flooding in the past two years could lead to a “greater awareness among the public” and help them see the need for insurance protection.

Recent extreme weather events have also stirred things at the government level. China has renewed its push to boost catastrophe insurance penetration, S&P said.

To overcome the public’s low awareness of disaster insurance, some local governments – including those in Ningbo, Shenzhen and Guangdong have been purchasing polices on behalf of their citizens, according to to the Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery (GFDRR), a World Bank program.

Urbanization is a risk factor

Rapid urbanization in China plays a role in the recent extreme weather events such as heavy flooding and global warming, climate experts say.

China’s megacities and other large, developed areas cover exposed land with concrete, making it harder for rainwater to drain through and increasing the risk of waterlogging.

Severe flooding is “expected to worsen due to climate change,” with an increase in the frequency and severity of extreme weather events, said a World Bank blog. “This is particularly true in the urban space, where impermeable land surface reduces infiltration and increases flash flood risks during storm events.”

According to S&P, more insurance will be needed to protect against flood events and providers will have to bear “greater sensitivity towards flood-related risks” when selling insurance.

Flood and typhoon insurance and their risk models are still underdeveloped in China, according to international disaster recovery program, GDFRR.

S&P said insurers need to account for this urbanization and regularly update their catastrophe models, which are computerized systems that generate simulated events and consider various risk factors to determine the potential amount of damage.

Kristen Stewart & Rami Malek have an sudden Twilight reunion

Hold on tight, Spidermonkeys, because Twi-Hards are about to go wild.

Thanks to Rita Ora‘s brilliant party planning skills, two Twilight stars were brought together for just one night. According to one of the British pop star’s latest Instagram posts: Kristen Stewart and Rami Malek helped director Taika Waititi heralds his 46th birthday along with a handful of other celebrities, including Ashley Benson and Kate Beckinsale.

Kristen and Rami acted opposite in Breaking Dawn: Part 2, the fifth and final part of the Twilight series. At this point, Bella (Kristen) Edwards (Robert Pattinson) Baby and you were preparing for a war with the Volturi, an elite group of vampires. Rami portrays Benjamin, a vampire with the ability to manipulate the elements of the earth, which makes him a particularly important figure in the Twilight universe.

In other words, fans assume that when Rami saw Kristen, he exclaimed, “Bella, where the hell have you been, loca?”

The Biden administration’s booster shot directions “must be performed fastidiously to be able to be one step forward of this virus,” says the US surgeon common

The US surgeon general Dr. Vivek Murthy told CNBC that the Biden government is recommending Covid booster vaccinations to most vaccinated Americans starting September 20 to stay one step ahead of the virus.

“We put our heads together, the top public health and medicine officials at the Department of Health and Social Affairs, and have come to the conclusion that it would be wise to start booster vaccinations after eight months to get one step ahead of this virus.” and make sure people have and are receiving protection from the vaccines they had for the past few months, “Murthy said.

A vaccine advisory committee from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration have yet to formally sign the plan before states can begin giving third doses.

Murthy told The News with Shepard Smith that the government’s booster shot strategy is also about transparency.

“We’re making plans now because, firstly, we need to plan ahead, but secondly, we wanted the public to know what we were seeing with the data in an effort to be transparent and open to the public,” said Murthy.

U.S. health officials are basing their decisions on new data showing that vaccination protection wears off over time. The vaccines were 92% effective against Covid infection before the Delta variant spread in the US, but data shows that protection has dropped to 64%.

Sri Lanka replaces the minister supposed to advertise the shaman’s recipe as a covid treatment

Sri Lankan politician Pavithra Wanniarachchi, who was former Minister of Health, was assigned to the Ministry of Transport.

Lakruwan Wanniarachchi | AFP | Getty Images

Sri Lanka’s president replaced the country’s health minister in a cabinet reshuffle this week as the Covid crisis worsened and daily deaths and infections hit record highs.

Health Minister Pavithra Wanniarachchi was transferred to the Ministry of Transport. Former media minister and official cabinet spokesman, Keheliya Rambukwella, has been appointed as the new health minister.

During Wanniarachchi’s tenure, the Ministry of Health was criticized for its handling of the pandemic. She also attracted controversy for allegedly using and supporting alternative medicines to prevent Covid-19.

It was not immediately clear what prompted the cabinet reshuffle.

Neither President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s office nor the Sri Lankan Ministry of Health responded immediately to CNBC’s requests for comments.

Herbal syrup and ‘blessed’ water

Wanniarachchi advertised a herbal syrup with honey and nutmeg that was created of a shaman who claimed it was a lifetime vaccination against the virus, the BBC reported. The shaman reportedly said the recipe was given to him in a visionary dream.

Doctors reportedly denied claims about the syrup’s effectiveness, but thousands defied social restrictions and traveled to a village in central Sri Lanka to receive the brew. Several politicians also reportedly ingested the potion.

The former health minister fell ill with Covid-19 and was reportedly in intensive care in January.

Last November, Wanniarachchi also poured a pot of “blessed” water into a river after a self-proclaimed god-man told her he would end the pandemic in Sri Lanka, the AFP reported.

Covid increase

Daily Covid cases in Sri Lanka have increased since July and have topped an average of 3,000 in the past few days. The country reported more than 7,000 new cases on Tuesday alone.

Since the pandemic started last year, the situation appeared to be under control until mid-April when cases began to rise – infections reported daily declined between June and early July before the numbers rose again.

Information compiled by Our World In Data showed that on August 17, the country reported 199.02 new cases per million people on a moving average of seven days. The total population of Sri Lanka is about 21.8 million people.

The number of reported deaths has also increased – a seven-day moving average there were 7.30 deaths per million people on August 17, compared with about 1.77 deaths on July 17.

The government has so far resisted calls for a lockdown to slow the surge in cases and deaths plaguing Sri Lankan hospitals.

Instead, the government appears to be banking on vaccines to deal with the surge.

The Associated Press reported that Sri Lanka used more than 1 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine when it began its vaccination campaign in January, before deliveries from India were halted. Sri Lanka has also used syringes from China, Japan, the United States and the global vaccine exchange program for low income countries called Covax.