Around The Web

Elon Musk's six secrets to business success

BBC - Thu, 2021-01-07 10:12
Six principles that have helped Elon Musk become one of the richest people on the planet.
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New York, Washington state lawmakers introduce LCFS legislation

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2021-01-07 08:52
New York and Washington Democrats pre-filed low-carbon fuel standard (LCFS) bills ahead of the start of each state’s legislative sessions, building on increased subnational momentum in recent months to enact the market-based clean fuels programmes.
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California gasoline consumption continues to lag, as diesel inches closer to 2019 levels

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2021-01-07 08:33
California gasoline and diesel consumption fell in September as the COVID-19 pandemic continued to temper demand across the Golden State, likely leading to lower fuel sector emissions under the WCI-linked carbon market, according to state data.
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Former Romanian minister accused of bribery involving EU carbon allowances

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2021-01-07 07:27
Romania's president has requested a criminal investigation be launched against a former environment minister accused of bribery and instigating embezzlement, in a case involving the exchange of free EU carbon allowances for metal products.
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Trump auction of oil leases in Arctic refuge attracts barely any bidders

The Guardian - Thu, 2021-01-07 06:33

Coastal plain was up for sale as part of the Trump administration’s plan to pay for Republicans’ tax cuts with oil revenue

The Trump administration’s last-minute attempt on Wednesday to auction off part of a long-protected Arctic refuge to oil drillers brought almost zero interest from oil companies, forcing the state of Alaska into the awkward position of leasing the lands itself.

The coastal plain of the Arctic national wildlife refuge was up for sale to drillers as part of the Trump administration’s plan to pay for Republicans’ tax cuts with oil revenue. Conservatives argued the leases could bring in $900m, half for the federal government and half for the state.

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Jenrick criticised over decision not to block new Cumbria coal mine

The Guardian - Thu, 2021-01-07 06:09

Environmental campaigners say failure to call in West Cumbria Mining planning application ‘jaw-dropping’

Environmental campaigners and a local MP have criticised the government’s “jaw-dropping” decision not to block the building of a “climate-wrecking coal mine”.

The communities secretary, Robert Jenrick, decided on Wednesday not to challenge the planning application for a new coal mine in Cumbria, despite opposition from Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, and the MP for Westmorland and Lonsdale, Tim Farron.

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EU Market: EUAs lift back above €33 as US Senate vote lifts markets

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2021-01-07 05:51
EUAs jumped back above €33 on Wednesday, defying weaker energy prices in a late surge coinciding with wider markets rising in anticipation that Democrats would gain control of the US senate.
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Whitehaven coal mine: Government refuses to call in plans

BBC - Thu, 2021-01-07 04:18
The government rejects holding an inquiry into plans for a coal mine, meaning it can progress.
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RGGI Q1 auction notice alludes to bank adjustment amount, as prices hit all-time high

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2021-01-07 03:10
The Northeast RGGI cap-and-trade scheme has shifted Q1 auction volume for the programme's upcoming five-year surplus bank adjustment, with more than 18 million allowances withheld from quarterly sales, according to a Carbon Pulse analysis.
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Climate change: Alaskan wilderness opens up for oil exploration

BBC - Wed, 2021-01-06 23:37
The Trump administration pushes ahead with first oil lease sales in an Arctic wildlife refuge.
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Brazilian beef farms ‘used workers kept in conditions similar to slavery’

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-01-06 23:08

Workers on farms supplying world’s biggest meat firms allegedly paid £8 a day and housed in shacks with no toilets or running water

Brazilian companies and slaughterhouses, including the world’s largest meat producer JBS, sourced cattle from supplier farms that made use of workers kept in slavery-like conditions, according to a new report.

Workers on cattle farms supplying slaughterhouses earned as little as £8 a day and lived in improvised shacks with no bathrooms, toilets, running water or kitchens, according to a report from Brazilian investigative agency Repórter Brasil.

Since 1995, the report said, 55,000 Brazilian workers have been rescued by government inspectors from “situations similar to slavery”. While the number of investigations has fallen in recent years – 118 workers were freed in 2018, compared with 1,045 a decade earlier – that does not mean the situation has improved, just that inspections have been reduced, it noted.

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Curiosity rover: Watching an eclipse from Mars

BBC - Wed, 2021-01-06 22:59
What do eclipses look like on Mars? Nasa rovers see the planet's moons pass in front of the Sun.
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EU carbon border tax is preferred design option in key CBAM consultation

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-01-06 22:35
Setting a carbon border tax on imports is the preferred option among respondents to a key consultation on the EU carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM), the results of which are meant to inform the European Commission’s design and implementation of the measure.
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Trading house Trafigura to consider offsets to help meet its first GHG goal

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-01-06 22:32
Swiss-based commodities trader Trafigura set its first emissions reduction target on Wednesday, aiming to cut its scope 1 and 2 emissions by at least 30% under 2020 levels by the end of its 2023 financial year.
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Islanders help rescue orca stranded on Orkney beach

BBC - Wed, 2021-01-06 22:23
Volunteers led the rescue effort to save the young 11ft-long stranded orca in Orkney.
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Australian wildlife 20 times more likely to encounter deadly feral cats than native predators

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-01-06 14:03

Researchers find invasive felines hunt with greater intensity, in broader environments and in greater numbers than equivalent native marsupial predator

Australia’s wildlife are at least 20 times more likely to come across a deadly feral cat than one of the country’s native predators, according to a new study.

Invasive cats, which kill billions of native animals each year, form a triple threat, the study finds, by hunting with greater intensity, in broader environments and in greater numbers than an equivalent native marsupial predator – the spotted-tailed quoll.

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Who should pick up the tab for the costs of climate change in north Queensland? | Richard Denniss

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-01-06 13:13

As climate risks continue to rise, the government is considering the idea of subsidising north Queensland homeowners

Is it fair that young men pay more for car insurance than older women, or that we make young healthy people buy private health insurance to keep the price of health insurance low for older customers? How about the fact that those who live in far-north Queensland are paying far more for home and contents insurance than those in the southern states?

While there’s no right answer to those questions, there is a wrong person to ask: namely, an economist.

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CP Daily: Tuesday January 5, 2021

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-01-06 12:59
A daily summary of our news plus bite-sized updates from around the world.
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Palm cockatoo: Why a unique ‘drumming’ bird is in peril

BBC - Wed, 2021-01-06 10:05
The palm cockatoo is thought to be the only bird to use tools musically to attract a mate.
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Severe climate-driven loss of native molluscs reported off Israel’s coast

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-01-06 10:01

Mediterranean study finds subtidal populations of cockles, whelks and other species have collapsed by 90%

The world’s most devastating climate-driven loss of ocean life has been reported in the eastern Mediterranean, one of the fastest warming places on Earth.

Native mollusc populations along the coast of Israel have collapsed by about 90% in recent decades because they cannot tolerate the increasingly hot water, according to a new study, which raises concerns about the wider ecosystem and neighbouring regions.

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