
UK Will Build Back and Bounce Back Greener, Says Johnson
As the coronavirus intensifies, Britain is on the road to getting 100 percent of its energy from offshore wind turbines according to UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
As the coronavirus intensifies, Britain is on the road to getting 100 percent of its energy from offshore wind turbines according to UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
While US President Donald Trump has contracted COVID-19, yet another president is in now isolation due to the virus, with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen now in self-isolation.
As Britain’s transition period out of the European Union fast approaches, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has signaled that, if it comes down to it, the country can live without a new trade deal.
US President Donald Trump announced via Twitter on Friday that he and his wife Melania had tested positive for COVID-19 and would be going into quarantine immediately.
While the world holds its breath for the development of a coronavirus-stopping vaccine, no successful vaccine is likely to act
Hit by plunging oil prices connected to the coronavirus, energy company Royal Dutch Shell is set to eliminate between 7,000 and 9,000 positions by the end of 2022., the company said on Wednesday.
While many people have been looking to put 2020 in the rear view mirror, and are relishing the idea of starting a crisp new year with all the public events that can muster, those dreams are fading fast.
In fact, by the looks of it, 2021 is looking to be 2020 version 2.0.
London’s New Years celebrations were cancelled last week. As of yesterday, the latest landmark event to be knocked off pubic calendars is Trinidad’s Carnival for 2021, originally set to culminate on February 16.
By Ricky Browne The issue of how much taxes US President Donald Trump does or doesn’t pay has come to
As fears of a second wave of the coronavirus build up, so do fears of a tighter lockdown and of
There may be a glimmer of hope on the horizon, as according to the International Monetary Fund, the world economy, while dire, may not be quite as bleak as it was June.