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Xylem (NYSE:XYL), Etsy (NASDAQ:ETSY), and Copel (NYSE:ELP): Doing Well by Doing Good for Investors and the Planet

Xylem (NYSE:XYL), Etsy (NASDAQ:ETSY), and Copel (NYSE:ELP): Doing Well by Doing Good for Investors and the Planet
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Etho Capital Fund: Climate Leadership US Stocks in an ETF - The Wall Street Transcript

Etho Capital Fund: Climate Leadership US Stocks in an ETF May 3, 2021 Amberjae Freeman, CEO, Etho Capital Amberjae Freeman is Board Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer of Etho Capital and is currently an expert advisor and partner for the ETF Manager Group’s (ETFMG) ETHO Climate Leadership US ETF. Ms. Freeman heads Etho Capital and its board to shape strategy and execute vision. She also serves on the board of directors of The Forum for Sustainable and Responsible Investment (US SIF) and is on the Advisory Board of the South Bay Economics Institute (SBEI) at CSU Dominguez Hills. Ms. Freeman’s career in sustainable finance began 15 years ago when she received dual fellowships with the Clinton Global Initiative in New York City and the Clinton Hunter Development Initiative in Kigali, Rwanda. Prior to joining Etho Capital, Ms. Freeman developed innovation-focused thematic portfolios for fintech startup Swell Investing.

The Brief: Soil-carbon markets, edtech startups, reduce and recycle, expanding EV charging, Goldman s sustainability bond, pay for success

February 17, 2021 | The Brief The Brief: Soil-carbon markets, edtech startups, reduce and recycle, expanding EV charging, Goldman’s sustainability bond, pay for success The team at Greetings, Agents of Impact!  Suzanne Biegel joins Tuesday, Feb. 23, at 9am PT / 12pm ET / 5pm London / 8pm Nairobi. RSVP today.  Featured: ImpactAlpha Original Farmers harvest ‘soil carbon’ to meet rising corporate demand for emission offsets. Candidates in last year’s U.S. Senate race in Iowa were asked in a televised debate to cite the clearing price for bushels of corn and soybeans (Sen. Joni Ernstmuffed her answer). In the next election, they may well be asked the going price for a ton of carbon. Farmers in Iowa are getting up to $20 a ton for carbon they sequester in their soil with cover crops, no-till  and other sustainable-agriculture techniques, and can fetch additional payments for water-quality credits. That can mean payments to farmers of up to $50 an acre. More than 1,

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