Not exact matches
(Posted 24 December 2011) Significant current scandals, and those yet to come In no particular order
Top salaries and bonuses - boardroom and shareholder individual responsibility The multiple between top and average pay Lawyers fees - the cost of the legal process Medical negligence claims against the NHS Care and treatment in the NHS «No win, no fee» personal injury compensation Democracy and the voting system Lords reform Political party funding The domestic energy market and pricing The Tax system and its inefficiencies and complexities Subsidies for new energy generation schemes The amount of crime fuelled by Drugs The availability of drugs in pris
Top salaries and bonuses - boardroom and shareholder individual responsibility The multiple between
top and average pay Lawyers fees - the cost of the legal process Medical negligence claims against the NHS Care and treatment in the NHS «No win, no fee» personal injury compensation Democracy and the voting system Lords reform Political party funding The domestic energy market and pricing The Tax system and its inefficiencies and complexities Subsidies for new energy generation schemes The amount of crime fuelled by Drugs The availability of drugs in pris
top and average pay Lawyers fees - the cost of the legal process Medical negligence claims against the NHS Care and treatment in the NHS «No win, no fee» personal injury compensation Democracy and the voting system Lords reform Political party funding The domestic energy market and pricing The Tax system and its inefficiencies and complexities
Subsidies for new energy generation schemes The amount of crime
fuelled by Drugs The availability of drugs in prison.
It calls for a revenue - neutral carbon price, a 10 million person «clean energy workforce,» a 65 miles per gallon average
fuel economy for cars and trucks by 2025, the construction of a nationwide high - speed rail network, a ban on oil drilling offshore and in the Arctic, and a phaseout of
subsidies to the fossil
fuel industry — all
top items on environmentalists» wish lists.
IMF recommends eliminating fossil
fuel subsidies, and adding a carbon price in the
top 20 emitting countries.
Subsidies for fossil
fuels have grown 45 percent under President Obama's «all - of - the - above energy» strategy; worldwide, they're estimated to
top $ 600 billion.
New Zealand claim a
top spot for rather hilariously, or not, urging countries to phase out fossil
fuel subsidies while shelling out big bucks to prop up fossil
fuel production to the tune of $ 80 million.