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UK public should get ‘people’s dividend’ in drive to hit green targets
Landmark report proposes free public transport, more green spaces and cash for home improvements
The British public should be given a “people’s dividend” worth billions of pounds as part of the national drive to hit targets for net zero carbon emissions and the restoration of nature, according to the most detailed blueprint to date for a green transition.
Free public transport, more green spaces and money for improving homes are at the core of a landmark report that proposes one of the greatest advances in the fairness agenda since the creation of the NHS.
Continue reading...Trains far greener but much more costly than planes, analysis finds
Passengers face ‘near impossible’ choice between low prices and climate-friendly travel, says Which?
Train fares on popular UK routes are 50% more expensive than plane fares despite rail journeys causing 80% lower carbon dioxide emissions, according to analysis by the consumer group Which?.
It said passengers face a “near impossible” choice between low ticket prices and climate-friendly travel. More people are taking holidays in the UK due to coronavirus and airlines have launched dozens of new domestic routes.
Continue reading...WA to update grid transition plan as rooftop solar heads to half of homes
WA to update its grid transition plan as rooftop solar becomes an even more dominant player in the market.
The post WA to update grid transition plan as rooftop solar heads to half of homes appeared first on RenewEconomy.
5 rocks any great Australian rock collection should have, and where to find them
Storage company 1414 Degrees names oil and gas executive as new CEO
1414 Degrees appoints long time oil and gas executive as its new CEO.
The post Storage company 1414 Degrees names oil and gas executive as new CEO appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Taylor appoints another fossil fuel executive to a key clean energy body
Angus Taylor installs yet another fossil fuel executive to the board of a key government body - this time it's the Clean Energy Regulator.
The post Taylor appoints another fossil fuel executive to a key clean energy body appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Wind and solar projects warned of “material” constraints in Victoria, NSW
AEMO has again warned of "material" constraints and delays to wind and solar projects due to lack of capacity in key part of grid.
The post Wind and solar projects warned of “material” constraints in Victoria, NSW appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Carry on flying, says government green plan
Ban on polluting lorries pledged in Tories’ transport greenprint
Delayed decarbonisation plan for achieving net zero emissions for transport by 2050 is published
New diesel and petrol lorries will be banned in Britain by 2040, under a “greenprint” to decarbonise all types of transport by 2050.
The British government’s long-awaited transport decarbonisation plan, finally published on 15 July, will include what is being billed as a “world-leading pledge” to end the sale of all new polluting vehicles and move towards net zero domestic aviation emissions by 2040.
Continue reading...CP Daily: Tuesday July 13, 2021
Headphones, saw blades, coat hangers: how human trash in Australian bird nests changed over 195 years
Shell plots 10 MtCO2/yr Alberta carbon capture facility
Pakistan detains five Chinese trawlers for alleged illegal fishing
Vessels laden with fish claim to have sheltered from storm, but Gwadar fishers want catch auctioned locally
Pakistan has detained five Chinese trawlers on suspicion of illegal fishing near its strategic port city of Gwadar, as a wave of protests swept across the region led by fishers concerned about losing control of their fishing grounds to China.
The Chinese trawlers, loaded with fish, were taken into custody by the Pakistan Maritime Security Agency (PMSA), which has begun an investigation into their suspicious presence in Gwadar, where China has built a deep-sea port as part of its global belt and road initiative.
Continue reading...Australia to fly ambassadors to Great Barrier Reef ahead of ‘in danger’ list vote
Representatives from nine voting nations among guests on snorkelling trip as Morrison government lobbies against Unesco recommendation
Ambassadors from more than a dozen countries will be flown to the Great Barrier Reef for a snorkelling trip on Thursday as part of the Morrison government’s lobbying campaign to keep the ocean jewel off the world heritage in danger list.
The government’s official reef ambassador Warren Entsch will host the Canberra-based diplomatic group which, he said, included nine countries with voting rights at the upcoming world heritage committee meeting.
Continue reading...Pennsylvania endorses final RGGI regulation despite dissent from Republicans, industry
PREVIEW: What to expect from the EU’s ‘Fit for 55’ climate proposals
Why are water companies pumping Britain’s seas full of filthy sewage? Because they can | George Monbiot
Fines are treated as a business cost, the Environment Agency is toothless – the whole thing stinks
What’s remarkable is not that a water company knowingly and deliberately poured billions of litres of raw sewage into the sea to cut its costs. What’s remarkable is that the Environment Agency investigated and prosecuted it. Every day, water companies pour tonnes of unprocessed filth into England’s rivers and seas, and the government does nothing.
Even in the wake of the sentence last week, under which Southern Water was fined £90m, the company’s own maps show a continued flow of raw filth into coastal waters. Same shit, different day. The only occasions on which water companies are allowed by law to release raw sewage are when “exceptional rainfall” overwhelms their treatment works. But the crap keeps coming, rain or no rain.
Continue reading...RGGI Q3 auction volume edges down on removal of past vintage allowances
North Carolina committee votes to begin RGGI rulemaking process
Outcry over plans for Sussex holiday village next to rare bird habitat
Center Parcs proposal for 223-hectare woodland site faces opposition from activists and locals
Center Parcs has been criticised over plans to build a complex on rare bird habitat in Sussex, next to a site of special scientific interest.
The holiday company announced it was applying to create its sixth UK holiday village on 223 hectares (551 acres) of woodland in Worth Forest, West Sussex. They hope to attract Londoners down to the wood, which was selected because of its transport links to the capital.
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