With the US debt ceiling crisis dominating the headlines this week, little attention has been paid to the crisis that still continues to engulf Europe.
In Europe, the focus is no longer on Greece, but on Italy. According to The Street, The cost of insuring against an Italian default reached a new high of 360 basis points Wednesday after yields on the country's benchmark 10-year bonds hit euro-era highs of 6.1 percent Tuesday.
In his address to the Italian parliament on Wednesday, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi blamed “speculators, global economic weakness and general problems in the eurozone,” for Italy’s woes.
However, fear remains that the country may default on its massive debt, which has in turn pushed up the cost of government borrowing.
Related: Europocalypse - Are The Days of The Eurozone Numbered?: Nouriel Roubini
Related: The European Union’s Catalogue of Failures: George Soros
The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has developed a tool that will be able to measure the amount of energy used and carbon dioxide emissions created by offices and businesses.
According to the UN News Centre, the Common Carbon Metric (CCM) could soon become a uniform system of standardisation that will define the environmental impact made by industries and businesses.
The CCM will gather information based on two approaches – a “top-down” model, which takes measurements from a collection of buildings, and a “bottom-up” model, which is applied to an individual building.
The popular social media platform Twitter announced on Monday that it had received a “significant” new round of funding, which has now valued the company at US$8 billion.
Much of the funding came from venture firm Digital Sky Technologies Global, who also have big shares in Facebook, Groupon and Zygna.
DST Global founder Yuri Milner told the Daily Mail that, “Twitter is one of the few companies that has truly changed the world.”
Related: Silicon Valley Bubble Warning: From the Bubble-Blower-in-Chief
Representatives from Twitter also confirmed in a blog post that the company had experienced massive growth over the last year, with further room for expansion.
Still, our weekly roundup would not be complete without mentioning the US debt crisis.
With most analysts agreeing that the agreed upon debt deal is unlikely to solve the majority of America’s economic woes, the financial instability and uncertainty has spread to the stock markets as US stocks plunged on Thursday to its worst one-day drop since the beginning of the financial crisis in 2008.
Related: Debt Deal Ok'ed - US Debt Ceiling Now $14.29 Trillion
Related: Economic Policy Institute: US Debt Deal Will Cost 1.8 Million Jobs
Related: Doomed for Disaster: America's Dangerous Debt Deal: Michael Mandelbaum
The Dow closed down 512.76 points to 11,383.68. The broader S&P 500 lost 4.8 percent to 1,200.07, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite plunged 5.1 percent to 2,556.39.