
Flight-free: What Swedish views on travel might tell us about the future
In Sweden, 80% of national flight emissions are caused by leisure and holiday travel, but new research shows a shift in the views on holidays by plane.
In Sweden, 80% of national flight emissions are caused by leisure and holiday travel, but new research shows a shift in the views on holidays by plane.
HYBRIT delivered the first fossil-free steel to a customer in Sweden, only a year after starting test operations at its pilot plant in Lulea.
Book sales in Sweden are at an all-time high in the first half of 2021 as people travelled less and entertained themselves more at home due to COVID-19.
Sweden is experimenting with hyperlocal, street-level changes to make the urban environment more human-centric.
The Mayor of Stockholm, Anna König Jerlmyr, explains why she believes finding meaning in life is good for individuals, businesses and entire cities too.
The widely renowned American poet Louise Gluck has won the 2020 Nobel Prize in Literature. Gluck is one of the most prominent poets in contemporary literature.
Smart grids are switching Swedish homes from energy consumers to power-making ‘prosumers.’ Local ‘district heating’ plants use excess heat to warm the majority of Swedish homes.
Sweden tops the global rankings as the nation best placed to make the switch to clean power, according to the Energy Transition Index 2020.
Sweden's approach – a combination of trust and strategic controls – could provide a key model for other countries.
Two scientists in Sweden explore the country's response to the outbreak, which remains more relaxed than its Nordic neighbours, and the thinking behind it.
Social isolation can damage your physical and mental health. This ground-breaking housing project gets people to mingle together for at least two hours per week.
Factors such as research and development expenditure, the number of domestic patent applications and the number of domestic public high-tech companies are all included in the rankings.
From open markets with competitive companies to effective government and an expansive welfare state, Nordic countries set an example for all the world, writes Børge Brende.
Gay marriage was legalised in Sweden in 2009 and Denmark in 2012, with both nations seen as global leaders for LGBT+ rights.
In order to maintain their independence in WWII, neutrals had to make up for their relative military weakness by offering economic concessions to the belligerents.