Patrons of glitzy Dubai bars could be sipping beverages cooled by a cube of ancient Arctic ice carved from a Greenland iceberg and shipped to the emirate — destined no longer to melt into the ocean, but into a very expensive drink.
The startup company, Arctic Ice, claims it's offering a novel way to harness a natural resource, carving out new economic opportunities and raising awareness of the Arctic.
To critics, it's wasteful to ship a product thousands of miles on fossil fuel-powered ships when Dubai already makes its own ice.
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📸 Julia Wäschenbach/picture alliance/Getty Images
Regulatory uncertainty in Europe highlights persistent friction between ambition and delivery. Delays to the EU’s deforestation regulations continue to complicate the sourcing of renewable building materials such as certified timber and biomass. These materials are central to eco-design for buildings and life cycle cost evaluation within green construction projects seeking BREEAM or BREEAM v7 certification. The administrative lag is raising concerns about the traceability of products covered by environmental product declarations (EPDs) and the coherence of sustainability benchmark systems across borders.
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