
This P-Talk examines the impact of climate change on productivity in APO member economies. Michael Tan, Chief Executive Officer of the Singapore Productivity Centre, moderates a discussion with Professor Yong Joon Jang of Kyung Hee University, the Republic of Korea, on key findings from the APO Productivity Outlook 2025. Professor Jang highlights how rising temperatures reduce labor productivity and shares adaptation strategies for sustaining growth. This P-Talk covers policy implications, sectoral challenges, and future resilience strategies.
#APO #ProductivityTalk or #TopTalk or #productivityinnovator
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हारने वाले को शुभकामनाएं Who could've imagined the rise of a False Pope Climate Catholic in Brussels, a New Dark Ages of 10,000 years: mandatory energy austerity, compulsory carbon tithes and loss of personal freedoms. Everything we fought for since the 16thC, for property rights, for personal autonomy, power to hold and transfer wealth without State confiscation, for free speech and free assembly, dying like 10,000 daemons screaming in the Void created by the SciGov Jobs for Life with Pensions Nephilim.
There is no objective observational evidence that we are living in a global climate crisis.
Even the biased UN's IPCC AR6 WG1 (Sixth Assessment Report, The Physical Science Basis, The Working Group 1) contribution., chapter 12 "Climate Change Information for Regional Impact and for Risk Assessment", page 1856, section 12.5.2, table 12.12 confirms there is a lack of evidence or no signal that the following have changed:
Air Pollution Weather (temperature inversions),
Aridity,
Avalanche (snow),
Mean precipitation,
Average Wind Speed,
Coastal Flood,
Agricultural drought,
Hydrological drought,
Erosion of Coastlines,
Fire Weather (hot and windy),
Flooding From Heavy Rain (pluvial floods),
Frost,
Hail,
Heavy Rain,
Heavy Snowfall and Ice Storms,
Landslides,
Marine Heatwaves,
Ocean Acidity,
Radiation at the Earth’s Surface,
River/Lake Floods,
Sand and Dust Storms,
Sea Level,
Severe Wind Storms,
Snow, Glacier, and Ice Sheets,
Antarctic Sea Ice,
Tropical Cyclones.