International | Faith, finance and the future of humanity

Remembering Tessa Tennant, giant of green finance

A rainmaker who cajoled the religious and made them greener

By ERASMUS

LAST November investment managers and prominent figures from many faiths (including Christians, Muslims, Jews, Buddhists and Taoists) gathered in the Swiss town of Zug and agreed to help each other direct the vast financial assets controlled by religious bodies towards projects that help rather than harm the earth. Out of that meeting sprang an initiative called FaithInvest. Its declared aims include the establishment of “a pipeline of investable projects in line with faith-consistent principles.”

Illustration of an open robot head revealing a multi-level office space inside, where people work at desks with computers, surrounded by bookshelves

There is a vast hidden workforce behind AI

Will they become redundant as the technology develops?

Two hands shaking over a gift box decorated with a bow and the flag of Taiwan.

The dangers of Donald Trump’s instinct for dealmaking

Trade wars are alarming, but so are might-makes-right deals



State capture is a growing threat. Reversing it is hard

The 15-70-15 rule and other ways to prise powerful fingers from the public coffers

China debates whether Trump is a revolutionary, or just rude

Its experts cannot decide whether the second Trump presidency is a threat or an opportunity

Donald Trump is affecting politics everywhere

The effects are often unexpected