
Tom Brown
European Securitisation Reporter at GlobalCapital
Articles
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Jan 14, 2025 |
bdcmagazine.com | Kenneth Booth |Tom Brown
By Tom Brown, Managing Director, Real Estate at IngeniousAs we move toward 2025, the UK real estate market is navigating a complex and ever-evolving landscape. Investors must weigh evolving factors such as political uncertainties, shifts in rental demand, and the impact of economic pressures on borrowing costs. Here’s five areas to watch in real estate in 2025:Political uncertainty and real estate risksThe political landscape continues to present risks for real estate in 2025.
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Dec 11, 2024 |
estateagentnetworking.co.uk | Tom Brown
Navigating trends, challenges, and opportunities: Five areas to watch in real estate in 2025 By Tom Brown, Managing Director, Real Estate at IngeniousAs we move toward 2025, the UK real estate market is navigating a complex and ever-evolving landscape. Investors must weigh evolving factors such as political uncertainties, shifts in rental demand, and the impact of economic pressures on borrowing costs.
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Nov 6, 2024 |
sustainableplastics.com | Tom Brown
Mechanically recycled polymers' share of the total market is set to increase in the coming decades but penetration, defined as domestic recycling production versus total polymer demand, is likely to remain limited through to 2050. Mechanical recycling domestic production is likely to represent 17% of total polyethylene consumption in Europe, and 19% of polypropylene by 2050, based on analysis of ICIS supply and demand data.
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Nov 5, 2024 |
petnology.com | Tom Brown
Mechanical recycling domestic production is likely to represent 17% of total polyethylene consumption in Europe, and 19% of polypropylene by 2050, based on analysis of ICIS supply and demand data. Rates in northern America and northeast Asia are likely to be similarly muted, according to ICIS analytics EMEA team lead for plastics recycling Egor Dementev.
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May 2, 2024 |
ftm.eu | Tom Brown |Christina Last
Researchers, journalists and activists have long used satellite imagery to track emissions of oil and gas companies. Now, they companies are using a new technology that could make that more difficult. Energy companies across Europe are using new technology that hides when they’re burning greenhouse gases they don’t use, a new investigation shows, obscuring the emissions they release during the process. This could make a new EU law aimed at cutting emissions harder to enforce.
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