
CBAM as a tool of EU investment pressure in 2026
CBAM as a tool of investment blackmail by the EU The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is increasingly evidently going beyond climate policy. In 2026,…
Pollution is not just “dirty water or air.” It is a silent transformation of the planet that is changing the climate, destroying food chains, and even the genetic stability of species. But it is also a challenge that the world has begun to respond to.
Today we see real actions that help restore the balance between industry, cities, and nature.

Norway’s fjords, which suffered from cruise ship emissions, became the first zones in the world with a complete ban on diesel-powered water transport.
From 2026, only electric or hydrogen-powered vessels will be allowed there.
Result:
After the large-scale pollution of the Rhine-Meuse delta, the government launched a closed water cycle program.
Industrial enterprises are required to recycle at least 85% of water in their own circuit.
Results for 2025:
The government is funding projects to plant seagrasses (Zostera marina) and algae that absorb CO₂.
Each hectare of seagrass can store up to 40 tons of carbon per year.
In 2025:
The city is converting air pollution into energy by capturing CO₂ from industrial pipes and producing biomethane from it.
Effect:
In 2025, a joint program with the EU was launched, which provides for the installation of air monitoring stations in industrial regions (Dnipro, Kryvyi Rih, Zaporizhia).
Intermediate results:

The world is gradually moving from the idea of ”cleaning up after” to a culture of prevention.
Real-life cases from Norway, Japan, the Netherlands, the USA, and Ukraine show that pollution can be reduced not only through bans, but through innovation, partnership, and trust in natural processes.
Ecosystems have an amazing ability to heal themselves—you just have to stop disturbing them.

CBAM as a tool of investment blackmail by the EU The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is increasingly evidently going beyond climate policy. In 2026,…

Growing organic raspberries is always a balancing act between agronomy, climate, and soil biology. These factors were particularly acute in the 2024–2025 season, as weather conditions in central Ukraine were unstable and stressful for the crop.

The AVELIFE Institute of Nanotechnology and Organic Products is developing the direction of nanocellulose as a qualitatively different level of cellulose materials — not just a crushed, but a structurally reinterpreted form of a natural biopolymer.