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CamaraVerdeComercio

CamaraVerdeComercio

@CamaraVerdeOrg

Instagram: @CamaraVerdeOrg | Conectamos, fortalecemos y acompañamos emprendimientos y empresas para crear cadenas de valor sostenibles

Bogotá Colombia & CDMX México Katılım Mayıs 2017
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Diofa 🐺💎
Diofa 🐺💎@JuniorDiofa24·
Ya vieron esto? La directora de un centro comercial de Paris, invita a Shakira a llevar el tour a Francia.. y de qué manera, hablando en costeñol y metiendo hasta la reina del carnaval y otras personalidades 😭👸🏼 Lo grande que eres mi reina @shakira
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
You think this war is about oil. It is not. Oil is the crisis you can see. The one you cannot see is sulfur. And sulfur is destroying industries that have nothing to do with the Middle East and everything to do with the periodic table. The Strait of Hormuz carries 45 to 50 percent of the world’s seaborne sulfur trade. Sulfur is a byproduct of Gulf oil and gas refining. When the refineries run, sulfur accumulates. When the sulfur ships, it feeds the global sulfuric acid supply chain. When sulfuric acid reaches copper mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo, in Zambia, in Indonesia, in Chile, it is sprayed over heaps of oxide ore in a process called leaching that dissolves copper minerals into solution and produces 99.99 percent pure cathode. Twenty to 25 percent of the world’s copper comes from this acid-intensive process. Each tonne of copper cathode requires 3 to 3.5 tonnes of sulfuric acid. The acid comes from sulfur. The sulfur came through Hormuz. Hormuz is closed. Sulfur prices have nearly doubled since February 28. The rally is the largest on record for the commodity. African copper miners, the ones who supply the cathode that wires everything from F-35 flight control systems to hospital ventilators to iPhone charging cables, are watching their input costs spike while the ore grade stays the same and the copper price falls on growth fears. The economics of leaching are collapsing at the exact moment the $1.5 trillion US defence budget demands more copper wiring for every weapons system it funds and every data centre the AI race requires. Forty thousand tonnes of copper cathode per month used to flow through the Jebel Ali hub in Dubai. That flow is disrupted. Insurance premiums for Gulf shipping have surged 300 percent. The cathode is not destroyed. It is stranded, sitting in warehouses connected to a port connected to a strait that the IRGC controls and the United Nations just failed to authorise anyone to reopen. The mechanism is invisible because sulfur is invisible. Nobody tracks sulfur futures on their trading app. Nobody tweets about sulfuric acid. Nobody writes headlines about heap leaching in the DRC. But the chain is unbroken and unbending: closed strait → halted sulfur → expensive acid → higher copper costs → more expensive wiring in every weapon, every vehicle, every building, every grid, every chip packaging substrate on earth. The war in the Gulf is not just repricing energy. It is repricing the base metal that conducts electricity in every system civilisation operates. And sulfur is not the only invisible casualty. The strait carried helium for semiconductor cooling. It carried naphtha for petrochemical feedstock. It carried urea for fertiliser. It carried LNG for Asian power generation. Each one feeds a different supply chain. Each supply chain feeds a different industry. Each industry feeds a different population. The war hit one chokepoint and the damage radiated outward through the periodic table like cracks through glass, following the molecular bonds that connect everything to everything. The last molecule standing was always methane. But methane does not travel alone. It brings sulfur with it. And the sulfur brings the acid. And the acid brings the copper. And the copper wires the world. Nobody is covering the sulfur crisis. The sulfur crisis does not care. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
The future of sustainable energy Colombian startup has created a device that turns salt water into light and power
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Marilé
Marilé@MarileNeumayer·
Vidas entrelazadas: videla, su hijo discapacitado y una de las monjas francesas, secuestradas por astiz. (Nota al pie: los apellidos van con mayúscula, salvo la de los genocidas y traidores de la Patria)
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Departamento Nacional de Planeación
¡Ojo al dato! 👁️ 📉 Por primera vez en nuestra historia, la energía del sol superó al carbón en Colombia. A diciembre, la capacidad instalada alcanzará los 4.200 megavatios. ✅ Se atendería el consumo eléctrico de 10,2 millones de colombianos y colombianas. ✅ Evitará la emisión de CO equivalente a sacar de circulación más de 265.000 carros al año. La transición energética es imparable. ¡Con dignidad, cumplimos! ✊⚡
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Andrés Camacho M.
Andrés Camacho M.@andrescamachom_·
En estos 4 años del Gobierno del Cambio con @petrogustavo logramos saltar de 2% al 17% en energía limpia. Un salto definitivo en la transición energética y sin duda uno de los grandes logros de este gobierno. Lo logramos! ☀️
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Unidad de Planeación Minero Energética - UPME
☀️⚡ Por primera vez, la energía solar generó más electricidad que el carbón y las plantas térmicas en el país. Colombia ya suma cerca de 4 gigavatios de energías limpias instaladas. 🌱🇨🇴 #ConDignidadCumplimos
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RTVC Noticias
RTVC Noticias@RTVCnoticias·
💡#MedioAmbiente | La energía solar superó al carbón en la generación anual de electricidad en Colombia. Así lo reveló este jueves la Unidad de Planeación Minero Energética, adscrita al @MinEnergiaCo: en 2025 la generación solar alcanzó 4.473,8 gigavatios hora, un 25% por encima de los 3.564,2 gigavatios hora que produjo el carbón en el mismo período. 🗞️Conoce más detalles aquí 👇rtvcnoticias.com/actualidad/med…
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Stats Globe
Stats Globe@statsglobe·
Jaguars in the World: 1. 🇧🇷 Brazil: 86,800 2. 🇵🇪 Peru: 22,000 3. 🇺🇸 United States: 15,000 4. 🇨🇴 Colombia: 15,000 5. 🇻🇪 Venezuela: 9,800 6. 🇲🇽 Mexico: 4,800 7. 🇵🇦 Panama: 4,000 8. 🇧🇴 Bolivia: 2,500 9. 🇪🇨 Ecuador: 2,000 10. 🇳🇮 Nicaragua: 1,350 11. 🇭🇳 Honduras: 1,200 12. 🇬🇾 Guyana: 950 13. 🇧🇿 Belize: 900 14. 🇨🇷 Costa Rica: 852 15. 🇬🇹 Guatemala: 600 16. 🇸🇷 Suriname: 455 17. 🇬🇫 French Guiana: 380 18. 🇦🇷 Argentina: 220 19. 🇵🇾 Paraguay: 100 Source: World Population Review
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El Espectador
El Espectador@elespectador·
Por unanimidad, Colombia fue el país elegido para liderar la red de cooperación de áreas protegidas de América Latina y el Caribe. 🔗👇 trib.al/MVUJxfk
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Cata Paul 🃏‍‍‍
Cata Paul 🃏‍‍‍@CataPaul2·
🦅 Top 20 countries with the highest bird diversity 1.🇨🇴 Colombia — 1,960 2.🇵🇪 Peru — 1,870 3.🇧🇷 Brazil — 1,830 4.🇮🇩 Indonesia — 1,730 5.🇪🇨 Ecuador — 1,660 6.🇧🇴 Bolivia — 1,430 7.🇻🇪 Venezuela — 1,410 8.🇨🇳 China — 1,340 9.🇮🇳 India — 1,300 10.🇨🇩 DR Congo — 1,180 11.🇲🇽 Mexico — 1,120 12.🇰🇪 Kenya — 1,110 13.🇦🇷 Argentina — 1,090 14.🇹🇿 Tanzania — 1,060 15.🇲🇲 Myanmar — 1,060 16.🇺🇬 Uganda — 1,040 17.🇺🇸 United States — 1,020 18.🇵🇦 Panama — 1,010 19.🇹🇭 Thailand — 1,010 20.🇿🇦 South Africa — 860 🖇️ Source: BirdLife International, Avibase, IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, and Mongabay
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CamaraVerdeComercio
CamaraVerdeComercio@CamaraVerdeOrg·
Si lideras una empresa en Colombia, cumplir con la Ley 2173 de 2021 puede ser mucho más que una obligación. La norma establece la siembra de dos árboles por cada empleado en “áreas de vida” definidas por las alcaldías. Inscríbete en👉 camaraverde.org  #Ley2173
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Juanita Broaddrick
Juanita Broaddrick@atensnut·
I could not stop watching this. In China they make denim from Abaca banana stalks from the Philippines. Whole Process was mesmerizing! 😳
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
A major city in Colombia cooled itself by 2°C simply by planting millions of trees and shrubs—demonstrating that nature provides one of the most effective cooling solutions available. Medellín has turned its urban environment into a cooler, more livable space through its innovative Green Corridors project, launched in 2016. The initiative planted nearly 880,000 trees and 2.5 million smaller plants along busy roads and waterways, replacing heat-trapping concrete with lush vegetation. This created an extensive network of interconnected green zones that function like natural cooling systems, reducing the city's average temperature by more than 2°C. Beyond cooling, the project delivers wide-ranging benefits: it purifies the air, boosts urban biodiversity by welcoming back wildlife, and fosters a healthier atmosphere through shade and evapotranspiration—the natural process by which plants release water vapor. Honored with the 2019 Ashden Award for Cooling by Nature, Medellín's approach has become an inspiring model for cities worldwide seeking sustainable ways to adapt to rising temperatures and combat climate change.
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Chioma Amadi
Chioma Amadi@Chioma__Amadi·
Earlier this morning, I reached out to someone to write a thread for my community on how to use Claude like a pro. Hours later, I opened my X and saw this article. Pause whatever you’re doing and read it for just 10 minutes. It might change how you work forever.
Corey Ganim@coreyganim

x.com/i/article/2028…

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