Columbia Business School Celebrates the Launch of the Open Climate Curriculum
Designed by Columbia Business School, the New Initiative Will Accelerate the Teaching of Climate Change in Business Schools Globally
Designed by Columbia Business School, the New Initiative Will Accelerate the Teaching of Climate Change in Business Schools Globally
The latest developments, from events and research and curriculum to new programs and initiatives.
EVs shouldn’t be a luxury item, but Biden’s tariffs mean they may remain so.
CBS hosted a workshop geared toward tackling soaring steel emissions as part of its Climate Knowledge Initiative.
A CBS center dedicated to addressing issues at the intersection of business and society is expanding to address the global climate crisis.
Why would Stripe, a payment-processing software company, be involved in funding carbon dioxide removal solutions? Nan Ransohoff recently visited CBS to share why the company is building up its capacities to take on climate change.
Columbia Business School Faculty Provide Insights into Vital Topics that Can Transform Outcomes for our Planet
In another session devoted to climate change, host Professor Ray Horton talks about an unconventional way of halting global warming — known as solar geo-engineering — with Professor Gernot Wagner, faculty director of the Climate Knowledge Initiative at the Tamer Center for Social Enterprise and senior lecturer at Columbia Business School.
During a recent workshop at Columbia Business School, experts addressed the challenge of soaring emissions, highlighting the urgent need for a comprehensive transformation across the industry.
For many years, steelmaking has followed a consistent, two-step process: First, iron ore is mined and mixed with coal, as well as other substances, to make molten iron. This process most often happens using highly polluting blast furnaces. Some 90% of steel-related emissions come from this first iron-producing step.