
免责声明
荷宝私募基金管理(上海)有限公司及其关联公司(“荷宝”)授予您访问本网站的权利, 但您需遵守以下条款和条件。请您仔细阅读以下条款和条件。
访问本网站及其任何页面, 即表示您声明并保证您所在司法管辖区的适用法律和法规允许您访问该信息, 并且您已同意以下条款和条件。如果您不同意这些条款和条件, 请不要访问本网站。 荷宝保留更改该等条款和条件的权利, 您应当定期查看此类更改, 您继续使用本网站即表示同意所有此类更改。
本网站上的任何内容均不构成税务、会计、监管、法律、保险或投资建议。本网站所载的信息或任何意见均不构成荷宝对买卖任何证券、期货、期权、基金或其他金融工具的招揽或要约, 并且若在任何司法管辖区内, 根据其适用法律, 此类要约、招揽、购买或出售是违法的, 也不得向任何人提供或出售任何此类金融工具。
限制
本网站不针对由于任何原因本网站被禁止发布或使用的司法管辖区内的人士, 任何适用此类禁令的人士不得访问本网站。访问本网站的用户有责任遵守适用法律法规。
信息与材料
这些页面中包含的信息, 材料, 条款, 条件和说明可能会有所变化。本网站包含的信息和材料, 包括但不限于文本, 图形, 链接或其他项目, 均为“现有”或“现存”信息。
荷宝尽合理努力在本网站中提供准确和最新的信息。但是荷宝不保证此信息和材料的准确性, 充分性或完整性, 并明确表示不对此类信息和材料中的错误或遗漏承担责任。您必须自己评估本网站所含信息的相关性, 准确性和充分性, 并进行您认为必要或适当的独立调查, 以进行此类评估。本网站包含的任何意见或估计均为一般性的, 您不得依赖其作为建议。
荷宝及其任何雇员或代理均未对您或任何特定人士或群体的投资目标, 财务状况或特殊需要进行任何考虑或调查。因此, 对于因您或任何人士或群体根据本网站包含的任何信息, 意见或估价而直接或间接造成的任何损失, 荷宝不作任何保证, 也不承担任何责任。
用于编制本网站的任何研究或分析均由荷宝获得, 供其自行使用, 并且可能是出于其自身目的而采取的行动。荷宝保留随时更改和更正意见、本网站及相关材料和链接的权利, 恕不另行通知。
不保证: 限制与责任
荷宝提供本网站的信息及材料, 但不作出与此相关的任何保证, 无论是明示的, 暗示的或法定的保证, 包括但不限于不侵犯第三方权利, 所有权, 适销性, 适用于特殊用途, 或免于计算机病毒的保证。
对于通过使用或访问本网站可能导致的任何形式的损失或损害, 包括直接的、间接的或后果性的损害, 荷宝均不承担责任。
互联网用户应该意识到, 由于我们无法控制的情况,
互联网上的通信可能会受到干扰、传输中断、数据传输延迟或错误的影响。荷宝明确表示不对中断、缺陷、操作或传输延迟、计算机病毒或系统故障,
或与本网站提供的信息和材料中的任何错误或遗漏承担责任。此外, 对于与本网站、使用或无法使用本网站有关或由此引起的任何损失或损害,
或任何未经授权方和任何计算机病毒篡改用户计算机系统的行为, 荷宝均不承担责任。
Sustainable Investing
Climate clocks
A climate clock is a means of demonstrating how much carbon can still be released into the atmosphere without breaching the Paris Agreement. As millions of tons of greenhouses gases are released by human activity daily, the world will eventually lose the ability to release any more without accelerating global warming.
Two of the best known are the MCC Carbon Clock run by German scientists, and a grassroots Climate Clock launched by a network of activists.
The MCC Carbon Clock shows how much carbon dioxide can still be released if the rise in global temperatures is to be limited either 2°C or 1.5°C. With just a few clicks, you can compare the estimates for the temperature targets, and see how much time is left in each scenario. Currently, there is only six years and 10 months left for the 1.5° C scenario, and 24 years and 8 months left for 2° C.
The clock is run by the Mercator Research Institute on Global Commons and Climate Change (MCC), a scientific think tank founded by the scientific foundation Stiftung Mercator and the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research. The data is supplied by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), and is based on the fact that around 42 gigatons of CO2 is emitted globally every year, or 1,332 tons per second.
The estimates of the remaining carbon budget are based on the IPCCC’s ‘Global Warming of 1.5°C’ report in autumn 2018. The next update of the carbon clock is set to come from the IPCC's Sixth Assessment Report due in 2022.
The Climate Clock was launched by the Beautiful Trouble activists network in 2015 to provide a measuring stick against which their supporters can track climate change mitigation progress. The clock can be displayed as a digital reading on buildings in major cities, on websites, or on apps. One was displayed in New York – appropriately enough in Times Square – while the first hand-held Climate Clock was custom built for activist Greta Thunberg.
The clock only counts down until when the world will reach 1.5 degrees of warming and broadly concurs with the MCC Carbon Clock – that the threshold will be reached in just under seven years. It shows that global warming to date is 1.14°C from pre-industrial times, leaving little room for maneuver if the Paris limits are not to be breached.
