91麻豆天美

UNCTAD

A new analyses the world鈥檚 ocean economy 鈥 worth an estimated $3-6 trillion 鈥 and assesses how human activity and multiple global crises have significantly affected different sectors.

will host the to identify trade policies to help countries grow their economies while tackling challenges and accelerating progress towards achieving the SDGs.

- in its latest  - warns that developing countries are facing years of difficulty as the global economy slows down amid heightened financial turbulence. Annual growth across large parts of the global economy will fall below pre-pandemic levels and well below the decade of strong growth before the global financial crisis. Developing countries are facing a projected foregone income of $800 billion and battling unprecedented levels of debt distress. Global growth in 2023 is expected to drop to 2.1%, compared to the 2.2% projected in September 2022.

For 15 years, Mavilde de Assun莽茫o Alves has struggled to maintain her hives, which have dwindled from 15 to 8. After attending a  , she鈥檚 more confident about the future.

World trade hit a record $32 trillion in 2022, but growth turned negative in the last half of the year. Environmentally friendly products defied the trend.

reports the Black Sea Grain Initiative - which has moved 25 million metric tons of grains - mostly benefitted developing countries, supporting food security among the most vulnerable.

Technologies used to produce goods and services with smaller carbon footprints are providing increasing economic opportunities, but many developing countries could miss them, unless governments and the international community take decisive action.

鈥檚 online courses in least developed countries (LDCs) benefit from trade.

The Bhutanese government launched the ground-breaking G2B digital government portal, using 鈥檚 customizable digital platform, making it the fastest place in the world to start a new business.

Digital technologies and e-commerce have the potential to transform livelihoods in the Pacific by enhancing trade across sectors and industries, finds in a new .

Complex and stringent rules of origin, the 鈥減assport鈥 for goods, can prevent businesses from taking advantage of trade preferences, according to a  by .

Issues of science, technology, and innovation remain endemic to development, and furthering our understanding of these issues is a core challenge for policy research. Deepening its commitment to this goal, launches the 2023 edition of its , a flagship publication that this year focuses specifically on what can be achieved by technological innovation by opening 'green windows of opportunity'. The report is built around green innovation - creating or introducing new or improved goods and services that leave lighter carbon footprints.

The world traded about in 2021 鈥 enough to fill over 18 million trucks. The queue would wrap around the globe 13 times! Since , most of the products will end up littering our streets and flooding our seas. But nature abounds in sustainable materials (bamboo, sand, banana plants, algae) that could be used to make eco-friendly versions of straws, shopping bags, bottles, food wrappers and other plastic products.

Plastic substitutes could cut global plastic waste by 鈥 about 63 million tonnes less, or 3.5 million fewer trucks in the queue. 鈥淏esides the benefits to the planet, the shift offers economic opportunities,鈥 said Henrique Pacini, an economist working on trade and environment issues. 鈥淏ut countries and companies have to work together and across borders to and reduce trade barriers."

The country鈥檚 online system is making it to access the benefits of registering their company with the government.

The current food crisis, triggered by COVID-19 and the war in Ukraine, is different, says, because of a stronger US dollar - creating a 鈥榙ouble burden鈥 for developing countries.