Abstract

Purpose: Commercial transactions have binding obligatory and regulations that are restricted within a particular jurisdiction. However, the bill of lading for international carriage of goods must be performed and exercised resulting to extension of executory principles based on International Commercial Contracts (UNIDROIT) with a particular focus of interest on renewable energies for corporate economic goals towards sustainable development. This paper aims to develop statutory interpretation, based on Rotterdam Rules, to show the relationship between waste to energy technology and sustainable development. This helps in illustrating environmental tax for carbon emissions of energy management based on life cycle of drugs.
 Methodology: Life cycle of drugs involves contractual agreements pertaining to sustainable development and waste to energy technologies. Its carbon emissions must be properly controlled and diverted to renewable energies in order to fulfill the economic success and political safety of sustainable development. The carriage of goods by sea involves legal instruments, such as Hamburg, Hague, and Hague-Visby Rules under principles of International Commercial Contracts (UNIDROIT). Rotterdam Rules covers a broader spectrum and more substantial elements of regulatory functions encompassing Hague, Hague-Visby, and Hamburg Rules.
 Findings: Development of carbon tax is a statutory interpretation for economic success of the company towards philanthropic sustainable development in relation to public interests of human rights. Rotterdam Rules developed a means to enforce the substantial elements for validity of Hague, Hague-Visby, and Hamburg Rules in terms of carbon emissions for renewable energies based on sustainable development goals. Hence, the waste to energy technology provided a means of interpreting their economic progress in relation to law of the environment comparable to another jurisdiction.
 Recommendation: In order to achieve economic and political stability, there must be a functional equivalence between waste to energy technology and sustainable development, hence, carbon emissions from commercial transactions of International Carriage of Goods must not serve as an impediment to economic success based on laws of the company and the environment, thus, it must fulfill the goals of political sustainable development resulting to renewable energies.

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