Sustainable Development Stocks List

Sustainable Development Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 12 MERC Mercer International Inc. (NASDAQ:MERC) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 11 LNZA LanzaTech Global, Inc. (NASDAQ:LNZA) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 10 AMTX Aemetis Inc (AMTX) Q1 2024 Earnings: Revenue Surges, Yet Net Loss Widens
May 10 MERC Mercer International Inc. (MERC) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 10 MERC Mercer International Inc. Reports Q1 2024 Earnings: A Mixed Financial Picture Amidst Market ...
May 10 LNZA LanzaTech Global, Inc. (LNZA) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 10 AMTX Stonegate Capital Partners Updates Coverage On Aemetis, Inc. (AMTX) Q1 2024
May 10 LNZA LanzaTech Global First Quarter 2024 Earnings: Misses Expectations
May 10 LNZA Q1 2024 Lanzatech Global Inc Earnings Call
May 10 SMI China's Top Chipmaker SMIC Sees Profit Margin Plummet To 15-Year Low Amid US Export Controls
May 10 AMTX Aemetis (AMTX) Reports Q1 Loss, Lags Revenue Estimates
May 9 AMTX Aemetis, Inc. (AMTX) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 9 MERC Mercer GAAP EPS of -$0.25 misses by $0.10, revenue of $553.43M beats by $45.51M
May 9 MERC Mercer declares $0.075 dividend
May 9 MERC Mercer International Inc. Reports First Quarter 2024 Results and Announces Quarterly Cash Dividend Of $0.075
May 9 LNZA LanzaTech Global files for $300M mixed shelf offering
May 9 AMTX Aemetis reports Q1 results
May 9 LNZA LanzaTech Global, Inc. (LNZA) Reports Q1 Loss, Lags Revenue Estimates
May 9 AMTX Aemetis Reports First Quarter 2024 Financial Results
May 9 LNZA LanzaTech Global GAAP EPS of -$0.13 misses by $0.01, revenue of $10.2M misses by $0.9M
Sustainable Development

Sustainable development is the organizing principle for meeting human development goals while at the same time sustaining the ability of natural systems to provide the natural resources and ecosystem services upon which the economy and society depend. The desired result is a state of society where living conditions and resource use continue to meet human needs without undermining the integrity and stability of the natural system. Sustainable development can be classified as development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations.
While the modern concept of sustainable development is derived mostly from the 1987 Brundtland Report, it is also rooted in earlier ideas about sustainable forest management and twentieth century environmental concerns. As the concept developed, it has shifted to focus more on economic development, social development and environmental protection for future generations. It has been suggested that "the term 'sustainability' should be viewed as humanity's target goal of human-ecosystem equilibrium (homeostasis), while 'sustainable development' refers to the holistic approach and temporal processes that lead us to the end point of sustainability". Modern economies are endeavouring to reconcile ambitious economic development and obligations of preserving natural resources and ecosystems, as the two are usually seen as of conflicting nature. Instead of holding climate change commitments and other sustainability measures as a drug to economic development, turning and leveraging them into market opportunities will do greater good. The economic development brought by such organized principles and practices in an economy is called Managed Sustainable Development (MSD).The concept of sustainable development has been—and still is—subject to criticism, including the question of what is to be sustained in sustainable development. It has been argued that there is no such thing as a sustainable use of a non-renewable resource, since any positive rate of exploitation will eventually lead to the exhaustion of earth's finite stock; this perspective renders the Industrial Revolution as a whole unsustainable. It has also been argued that the meaning of the concept has opportunistically been stretched from 'conservation management' to 'economic development', and that the Brundtland Report promoted nothing but a business as usual strategy for world development, with an ambiguous and insubstantial concept attached as a public relations slogan (see below).

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