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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Russia-Ukraine war: Moscow promises humanitarian corridors; US to send Patriot missiles to Poland – live

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Russia says it will observe a ‘regime of silence’ in several Ukraine cities, Biden administration rejects Polish plan to use MIG jets to help Ukraine

US dismisses Polish plan to use MIG jets to help UkraineRussia ‘solving logistics’ and could attack Kyiv in days – experts‘They were cannon fodder’: Siberian governor confronted by relativesZelenskiy invokes Churchill as he calls on UK to do more to helpTell us: how have you been affected by the situation in Ukraine?

Investors are turning to clean energy stocks as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine threatens to further raise oil prices and highlights Europe’s dependence on Russian oil and gas.

US markets are closed right now but on the Australian exchange the price of the Global Clean Energy ETF offered by VanEck, which tracks the price of big renewable energy companies that are on an index maintained by S&P, is up more than 8% so far today.

The index itself was up 5.6% overnight.

The Russian market, which is heavy with oil and gas companies, has already been devastated by sanctions imposed by the US and European countries, although so far western powers have steered clear of doing anything that could stop customers paying for Russian oil and gas.

Russia itself is also about to default on its sovereign debt due to the sanctions and the threat of more to come, ratings agency Fitch said.

VanEck senior associate Alice Chen said the US’s decision to ban imports of Russian oil could further boost prices, adding to the attractiveness of renewables.

“This trend towards clean energy stocks too will likely gain momentum as energy consumers seek substitutes for fossil fuels and the demand for renewable energy rises to meet climate change carbon emissions targets,” she said.

“The Russia-Ukraine war highlights the vulnerability of countries that rely on fossil fuels, arguably raising the importance of clean energy as an energy supply and it could be an important impetus for the acceleration to clean energy globally.”

Sumy mayor Dmytro Zhyvytskyi says one person has been killed, fourteen killed and others missing following shelling in Okhtyr overnight.

Posting photos of the damage to social media, he reported that civilian infrastructure had been targeted including a railway station, executive committee building, local department stores and shops.

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