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When We Choose War, We Cannibalize the Solution

 When We Choose War, We Cannibalize the Solution


When We Choose War, We Cannibalize the Solution
April 22, 2026
Reading time: 3 minutes

Full Story: Corporate Knights
Author: Ralph Torrie


Irpin, Kyiv Oblast, Ukraine. 1 April 2022. (UNDP Ukraine/flickr)



My father saw the devastation of the Second World War firsthand and often said, “There are no winners in war.” It sounded like moralism when I was young. Today it reads like systems analysis. In a world of tight carbon budgets and finite critical minerals, the war economy and the energy transition are not parallel projects. They are rival claimants on the same resources, and only one of them can ultimately keep us safe.

We already know the headline facts. The wars in Ukraine and Iran are producing emissions on the order of a mid-sized industrial economy. The scramble for energy and resources helped set the stage, and the destruction of pipelines, depots and power stations has become a recurring spectacle. Analysts have tallied the greenhouse gases, the poisoned soils, the bombed substations and the forests turned to smoke. Less discussed is what this means for the energy transition itself: every tank, missile and drone is built from metals and fuels we also need for wind turbines, batteries and resilient grids.

Every tonne of copper that ends up in shrapnel rather than in wires, every kilogram of lithium that ends up in loitering munitions rather than stationary storage, slows the transition and deepens climate risk for everyone, including the supposed winners. When we choose war, we are not just adding to the climate problem; we are cannibalizing the solution.

Here we face a fork in the road. One path is to treat transition minerals as the new oil: strategic assets to be hoarded, weaponized and fought over. That path is already visible in export controls, trade extortion and a growing list of violent incidents and community protests around mines in the GlobalSouth. The other path is to treat them as a global lifeline for common security, with shared stockpiles, transparent reporting, producer countries as real partners and apolitical norm that the first call on these minerals is decarbonization, not escalation.

Modern warfare also confirms, in the harshest possible way, the old principle that shows up in all the great religious traditions: what you do unto others, you do unto yourself. In a tightly coupled Earth system, the effects of our actions propagate through food webs, supply chains and the atmosphere. When a refinery or gas pipeline explodes, the carbon doesn’t check passports on the way up. When artillery fires shell after shell into fields, the contaminants do not ask permission before entering rivers and crops. Thermobaric weapons suck oxygen from the air and generate firestorms; forests and towns burn, releasing greenhouse gases and black carbon that darken ice and accelerate melting thousands of kilometres away. High-precision missiles and drones can target power plants and transmission lines with uncanny accuracy; the replacement steel and concrete, when they eventually arrive, carry their own enormous carbon price tag. In Ukraine, war-related emissions are now estimated to exceed the emissions from all of the country’s civilian sectors.

And yet, from a certain narrow corner, war looks like a success story. Defence budgets climb; order books for missiles, shells and air defence systems fill; share prices rise. Headlines announce record revenues for the world’s largest arms makers. If your horizon is the next quarter and your constituency is shareholders, war is indeed “good for business.”

But that business model is parasitic on the larger economy and on the biosphere. War destroys infrastructure, scares off investment, shreds trade links and forces governments to divert money from health, education and decarbonization into replenishing stockpiles and repairing damage. It also burns through critical minerals that the low-carbon economy will need for generations.

Militarization is itself a threat to our security and that leads to some uncomfortable but necessary questions for business and finance. Should climate-aligned investors treat defence exposure as compatible with net-zero strategies, given what we now know about war’s emissions and mineral demands? Should governments that proudly report power-sector decarbonization be allowed to keep military emissions off the books? Should critical-mineral off take agreements be judged only on price and supply security, or also on whether they prioritize uses that reduce net global risk?

My father’s line about there being no winners in war was, in its way, a statement of planetary accounting. In the 21st century, with the atmosphere full and the mineral supply tight, any war anywhere threatens states and markets everywhere, and the thin atmospheric envelope that makes any kind of economy possible at all.

Ralph Torrie is director of research at Corporate Knights, where this post was first published.

Starting early

 Starting early

Friends cheers with cocktails at home before going out

Unsplash

One of the surest signs of rising prices? The hottest place to grab a drink may be your place. With the average price of a cocktail in the US at $13.61 (which would be cheap in some cities), people with 401(k)s are pregaming like college students to save cash, the Wall Street Journal reports:

  • In a survey conducted by consumer-insights platform Zappi, nearly one-third of people who had drinks in the past three months said they pre-drink to avoid shelling out money later.
  • And among those who told Zappi that higher prices influence their decision about going out, 37% pre-drink and 41% have switched to a non-alcoholic option when out and about.

Others are choosing a stealthier method of getting buzzed for less: sneaking their own booze into venues. And since that crowd gravitates toward smaller bottles, it’s shifting sales. Suntory’s chief executive told the WSJ the company has seen increased demand for nips of Jim Beam and Maker’s Mark, Diageo has started making mini versions of its high-end Don Julio 1942 extra AƱejo tequila, and ALB Vodka said sales of airplane-sized bottles more than tripled in Q1 compared with last year.

What to know about the lethal hantavirus outbreak

 What to know about the lethal hantavirus outbreak

Hantavirus cruise ship outbreak

Jeffrey Groeneweg/Getty Images

An Atlantic cruise with nearly 150 passengers onboard is suffering from an outbreak of hantavirus, a respiratory disease with a mortality rate of up to 50%. Health authorities in several countries are tracking down dozens of passengers who had left the ship before virus cases were confirmed.

Since the Dutch-flagged Hondius departed Argentina last month for the African nation of Cape Verde, three passengers have died and five others have fallen ill, with at least five cases confirmed via lab testing. Thirty passengers from 12 countries disembarked at the island of Saint Helena and flew home last month. Authorities are now attempting to locate them.

This isn’t Covid 2.0…as health experts assure that the risk of a hantavirus pandemic is low, since it doesn’t spread easily between humans and isn’t as mutation-prone as Covid.

How does one get sick?

People typically contract hantavirus by coming into contact with rodent droppings or inhaling contaminated particles. But Hondius passengers could have been transmitting it to each other:

  • Some passengers tested positive for the rare Andes version of the virus—the only hantavirus strain for which human-to-human transmission is known to be possible.
  • People can pass the Andes variant to each other through close physical contact or by sharing utensils.
  • The virus’s flu-like symptoms can appear one to eight weeks after exposure.

There are currently no targeted treatments for the disease, and no FDA-approved vaccines, though research efforts are underway to develop one.

It’s a bad look for cruises. The outbreak is reminding vacationers right at the start of summer travel season that cruise ships can act as floating petri dishes for communicable diseases, with their buffet-style dining and passengers rubbing shoulders at the blackjack table mingling in close quarters. The vacation vessels were major hot spots for Covid in the early days of the pandemic and are also common sites of norovirus outbreaks.

Looking ahead: Hondius is now being diverted to the Canary Islands with plans to send the passengers back to their home countries.

How much protein do you actually need?

 

Peanuts in a bowl on a kitchen scale

Getty Images

This is the question that should have been posed to the supercomputer in The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Instead, we’re left scrabbling together macronutrient advice with the panic of a high school student who forgot about today’s calculus exam.

For years, it was straightforward enough. US dietary guidelines long advised that adults eat 0.8 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight (0.36 grams/pound) every day, which is in line with the World Health Organization’s recommendations.

But this year, the US updated its protein guidance to 1.2–1.6 grams per kilogram (0.55–0.73 grams/pound), which many nutritionists considered to be too much for the average person. Some caveats:

  • This amount of protein can be appropriate if you’re strength training or are over 65, when muscle loss tends to accelerate.
  • One dietitian told Stanford Medicine that she also recommends the higher end of this range for patients who are losing body mass on GLP-1s.

Busted: You may hear that you should be eating 1 gram of protein per pound that you weigh, but a dietitian writing for the Mayo Clinic says that anything above 0.9 grams per pound (2 grams/kilogram) is excessive. Another myth, according to Stanford’s director of nutrition studies, is that plant-based protein is “incomplete” compared to animal protein. If anything, carnivorous diets may lack sufficient fiber, which is found aplenty in plant-heavy diets.—ML

NEWS YOU CAN USE

Much like Ryan Gosling when he was promoting Project Hail Mary, protein is showing up everywhere you look. Here are some of the more unexpected—and downright confusing—foods that now boast about having protein, and how many grams each has per serving:

Even the train to the World Cup is expensive

 Even the train to the World Cup is expensive

Illustration of a New Jersey transit ticket being ripped in half by two different businessmen, revealing a family of sad soccer fans behind it.

Nick Iluzada

Oh, now everyone cares about going to New Jersey. NJ Transit’s plans to ratchet up the price of a round-trip ticket from New York’s Penn Station to New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium to ~$150 during this summer’s FIFA World Cup has sparked an outcry, according to The Athletic.

The 18-mile rail journey normally costs $12.90 for a return ticket, so the roughly 1,163% price hike has shocked fans, who have few other options to get to and from the eight games hosted at MetLife Stadium—including the championship.

Now, it’s political:

  • NJ Gov. Mikie Sherrill, who inherited the FIFA contract when she took office in January, released a video yesterday accusing FIFA of taking advantage of the state’s transit system by providing $0 to help offset the $48 million added cost for the event.
  • But FIFA doesn’t typically help pay for transportation costs.

Big picture: The hundreds of thousands of World Cup fans expected to descend on the area in June and July are already feeling stretched thin by FIFA’s non-transparent, sky-high ticket prices. Even with nearly a third of tickets unsold, prices have reached record-breaking levels—with seats at some desirable games going for as much as $10,000 each.

NYC plans to tax rich people’s backup homes

 NYC plans to tax rich people’s backup homes

Luxury condo building

Getty Images

Web-spinning spiders living in penthouses overlooking Central Park might soon see a tax on their dwellings. This week, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced a proposed tax on non-primary residences in the Big Apple that are valued above $5 million.

The measure would affect about 13,000 second homes—aka pied-à-terres—owned by wealthy folks who mostly live elsewhere but use them as investments or a place to crash when visiting town.

Taxing out-of-towners

Mamdani pitched the measure as a charge on “the ultra-wealthy and global elites” that would help the city close its $5.4 billion budget gap. The Hochul administration said the proposal would bring city coffers at least $500 million yearly. An independent estimate put the haul at $232 million for a similar proposal in 2020.

Proponents argue that absent neighbors should have to pull their weight:

  • They say that the tax targets property owners who don’t pay local taxes or patronize nearby businesses, yet benefit from municipal services that support their home values.
  • Several major cities like Paris and Vancouver already tax empty cribs.

But…local real estate industry groups say it will undermine NYC’s luxury-housing market, reducing tax proceeds from bougie home sales and costing construction and maintenance jobs.

Looking ahead…Hochul aims to include it in the next state budget that lawmakers are currently negotiating.

Hollywood celebs protest Paramount-Warner merger

 Hollywood celebs protest Paramount-Warner merger

Joaquin Phoenix, Kristen Stewart, Tiffany Haddish

Daniele Venturelli/Getty Images, Gilbert Flores/Getty Images, Chad Salvador/Getty Images

Paramount’s planned takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery inspired a protest letter with a list of signatures that’d make any autograph collector swoon. Yesterday, an ensemble cast of over 1,000 Hollywood creators—including dozens of A-listers like Ben Stiller, Joaquin Phoenix,​​ Kristen Stewart, and Tiffany Haddish—issued a statement expressing “unequivocal opposition” to the $111 billion deal.

The signatories maintain that further consolidation doesn’t herald a Hollywood ending for the film industry:

  • They’re concerned it’ll lead to fewer movie releases, resulting in industry job losses and leaving audiences with less choice for entertainment.
  • The letter notes that the merger “would reduce the number of US major film studios to just four.”

The concerns echo anxieties over Paramount’s plan to save investors $6 billion by eliminating duplication within the two companies, which has reportedly left Warner Bros. staff fearful of job cuts.

Paramount responded by saying that merging competencies will help the new megastudio compete and green-light more projects. It also reiterated CEO David Ellison’s vow that the merged behemoth would release at least 30 movies per year for the big screen.

It’s no golden age

Hollywood was worried even before the tectonic merger appeared on the seismographs. The amount of work available has already been reduced by productions moving to cheaper overseas locations and by streaming platforms prioritizing profitability over growing content libraries. The number of jobs in the industry has dropped by 30% since late 2022, according to government data.

The merger has also rankled pricey popcorn purveyors: Earlier this month, Cinema United, the trade group representing 31,000 US movie theater screens, asked state attorneys general to investigate the deal over competition concerns. The group said it worries fewer movie releases could endanger business—which is already struggling with weak box-office hauls.

Looking ahead…federal regulators are expected to green-light the merger, but state authorities could still challenge it. California Attorney General Rob Bonta has promised a “vigorous” review.

The artist with 12,000 recordings

 The artist with 12,000 recordings

Asha Bhosle

Asha Bhosle performs at the ‘75 Years of Asha’ concert at Carnegie Hall in 2008. Jack Vartoogian/Getty Images/Getty Images

Asha Bhosle, a Bollywood singer whose career spanned eight decades and who held the Guinness World Record as the most recorded artist in music history, died yesterday at the age of 92, prompting an international outpouring of condolences.

By Bhosle’s count, she had made 12,000 recordings in 20 languages. How so many? In addition to releasing hundreds of albums and performing worldwide, she served as a “playback singer”—recording songs for actresses to lip-sync to on screen in Bollywood movies. But she was far from an anonymous cipher. Bhosle created a style all her own from traditional, cabaret, and other Western influences, though her ultimate gift was possessing a “timeless brilliance,” Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi wrote in a condolence post on social media.

NPR described her voice as “flexible and powerful,” noting she kept most of her vocal range, even into her advanced years. During her career, Bhosle received India’s highest arts honor, the Dadasaheb Phalke Award, and was nominated for two Grammys.

Warehouse failures endanger Mississippi liquor stores

 Warehouse failures endanger Mississippi liquor stores

a liquor store in Mississippi

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/Getty Images

You know something is radically wrong with liquor stores if their most profitable month of the year is Dry January.

According to the Washington Post, that’s how 2026 has played out for many liquor stores in Mississippi that are now either out of business or on the brink of closing after the state’s only wholesale alcohol warehouse nuked its own computer system.

Inventory system of a down

Mississippi is one of 17 Alcoholic Beverage Control states. That means the state handles alcohol distribution rather than relying on the private sector:

  • It has a single wholesale liquor warehouse, which the legislature required a third party to run as of a few years ago. That job went to the Ruan Transport Corporation.
  • This past fall, Ruan told retailers it planned to close for two weeks in January to do inventory.
  • In addition to counting boxes, however, the company reportedly also decided to tear out old conveyor belts in favor of a new packing system that relied on humans. But then…Ruan allegedly didn’t hire humans.

By the time Ruan got temporary workers on the job, there were 200,000 backorders that needed to be filled.

Zoom out: The state is now planning to build a new warehouse, but that won’t open until 2027.

David Suzuki is marking a big milestone birthday

 

Dear Tyee Reader, , 
 
David Suzuki is marking a big milestone birthday, and you’re invited to the party. Join us for Legacy: A Celebration of David Suzuki at 90, in concert with Vancity
 
Turning 90 only happens once, so we’re pulling out all the stops. This gathering will be an uplifting evening of music and storytelling, honouring David’s lifelong commitment to the planet. And it will benefit the David Suzuki Foundation’s work protecting nature, curbing climate change and creating resilient communities. 
 
This one-night-only event brings together an extraordinary group to celebrate a great leader who has inspired millions and helped shape the environmental movement in Canada and beyond. 
 
Renowned storyteller, broadcaster and producer George Stroumboulopoulos will host. Feature performers and acclaimed artists include Bruce Cockburn, Chantal Kreviazuk, Sarah McLachlan, Danny Michel, William Prince, Sam Roberts Band, Snotty Nose Rez Kids, Tanya Tagaq and Tia Wood, alongside special appearances by David Suzuki, Tara Cullis, Jane Fonda, Al Gore and Rick Hansen.  
 
When: Friday, May 22, 2026 at 7 p.m.  
Where: Queen Elizabeth Theatre, 600 Hamilton Street, Vancouver, B.C. 
Get your ticketsDavid’s legacy lives not only in his accomplishments, but also in the people and communities he’s spurred to action. The students who pursued their passions. The viewers who became voters. The families who expanded their horizons watching The Nature of Things
 
That’s why he wants to dedicate his birthday to Earth and celebrate it with you. 
 
We hope to see you there!

P.S. This is more than just a concert. It’s a rallying cry for environmental action and a celebration of the countless people who’ve joined David on his journey. Get your tickets now.

Gen Z says AI is losing aura

 Gen Z says AI is losing its aura

Illustration of huge looming faces looking distressed down at a circuit board with a little AI spark on it.

Nick Iluzada

The trillions of dollars being poured into AI may transform the world, but it isn’t stopping young people from thinking it’s mid, cringe, and, worst of all, chopped. According to a recent Gallup survey, Gen Zers have become angrier and less excited and hopeful about the tech in the last year:

  • Angry: 22% (2025) → 31% (2026)
  • Excited: 36% → 22%
  • Hopeful: 27% → 18%

Employed Gen Zers are also more than three times as likely to say the risks of using AI at work (48%) outweigh the benefits than vice versa. That may be because of all the AI-related layoffs, but who’s to say?

Nail your jibe mark rounding

 Nail your jibe mark rounding


Dave Dellenbaugh, member of the 2025 Class of the National Sailing Hall of Fame, discusses mark roundings in WindCheck magazine:


Whenever you approach a jibe mark, your strategic challenge is how you would make the fastest, smartest rounding in the existing conditions, assuming there are no other boats around. Once you know this, you can use tactical moves to implement this strategy in the middle of a fleet.

Getting around a jibe mark without wasting time or distance requires many different skills and teamwork. You must be able to turn your boat smoothly, handle the sails efficiently, and choose an optimal course around the mark. – Full report

Editor’s note: Dave’s been writing about the sport for a long time… back when jibe marks were more the norm than a rarity.

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