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Climate explained: could the world stop using fossil fuels today?
ANALYSIS: RGGI participants expect Q2 auction settlement near secondary market, with potential Virginia surprise
EU national energy plans “not enough” to deliver climate goals -NGOs
UPDATE – RFS Market: RINs crack 50 cents on persistent bullish sentiment
Coronavirus: Public told to cut water use amid surge in lockdown demand
NZ Market: NZUs rise to 3-mth highs on govt price control announcement
EU Midday Market Briefing
Extinction crisis 'poses existential threat to civilisation'
Remembering Cheetahs photography competition – the winners
Remembering Wildlife, the groundbreaking charity picture book series, has announced the 10 winners of its photography competition to appear in its forthcoming book, Remembering Cheetahs, which will help to protect the world’s most endangered big cat. There are only around 7,100 cheetahs left in the wild. The book will be published on Monday 12 October and the winning images will be printed alongside stunning images donated by many of the world’s leading wildlife photographers
Continue reading...Locked down afloat: why dozens of cruise ships ended up stranded in Manila Bay
Thousands of Filipino and international crew members are stuck as they await results of Covid-19 tests
From the balcony of her cabin, Sofia Ivanov* welcomes the light rain that cools the scorching Manila summer. As coronavirus empties the world’s cruise lines of guests, crew workers like her get to use the luxurious guest rooms before they lose their jobs.
Over two dozen other massive cruise ships dot her view of Manila Bay. It’s a spectacular view, but Ivanov is tired of it after seeing nothing else for weeks.
Continue reading...The next global health pandemic could easily erupt in your backyard
Climate change: older trees loss continue around the world
Magnis raises $1.5m to advance its Townsville battery “gigafactory” plans
Magnis Energy, part of a consortium planning to build a lithium-ion battery cell “giga-factory” in Queensland’s north, has tapped investors for $1.5m.
The post Magnis raises $1.5m to advance its Townsville battery “gigafactory” plans appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Greens to move against lifting Victorian gas moratorium
Victorian Greens slam planned legislation to lift Victoria's gas moratorium, saying emissions impacts being ignored.
The post Greens to move against lifting Victorian gas moratorium appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Morrison’s building boost must target efficient, sustainable housing, experts say
Building industry experts call on federal government to tie construction sector stimulus to greener building practices, including higher standards for energy and thermal efficiency.
The post Morrison’s building boost must target efficient, sustainable housing, experts say appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Fluence proposes two big batteries to upgrade Victoria-NSW transmission lie
Fluence proposes two big batteries - each of 250MW - to upgrade the capacity between the two biggest electricity markets in Australia, NSW and Victoria.
The post Fluence proposes two big batteries to upgrade Victoria-NSW transmission lie appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Football pitch-sized area of tropical rainforest lost every six seconds
Report also warns Australia will experience more extreme fire seasons due to climate crisis
The amount of pristine tropical rainforest lost across the globe increased last year, as the equivalent of a football pitch disappeared every six seconds, a satellite-based analysis has found.
Nearly 12m hectares of tree cover was lost across the tropics, including nearly 4m hectares of dense, old rainforest that held significant stores of carbon and had been home to a vast array of wildlife, according to data from the University of Maryland.
Continue reading...Berta Cáceres was exceptional. Her murder was all too commonplace | Nina Lakhani
The powerful forces behind the death of the Honduran indigenous leader are still targeting human rights defenders and environmental campaigners like her
- Join a conversation with the author on Tuesday 9 June: Nina Lakhani joins Guardian US international editor Martin Hodgson to discuss the story behind Cáceres’s murder. Live on the Guardian at 1pm EST/10am PST/5pm BST. Email events.us@theguardian.com to sign up and get a reminder
Fifty-one months ago today Berta Cáceres was gunned down by hired assassins at her home in western Honduras. Cáceres was an indigenous leader, a political radical and a grassroots human rights defender who dedicated her life to resisting the patriarchal neoliberal world order and fighting for environmental justice. She was smart, kind, provocative and a rare leader who could listen, negotiate and bring people together. She was killed less than a year after winning the prestigious Goldman environmental prize for leading a campaign to stop construction of an internationally funded hydroelectric dam on a river considered sacred by the indigenous Lenca people. She died way too young, at only 44, at a time when our world’s indigenous peoples and natural resources are under sustained attack from unsustainable greed and consumption. The race to save the planet is on, but radical changes are needed and time is running out. Her death was a crime against her family, the Lenca people, Honduran society and humanity. Fifty-one months ago today, the world lost a rare leader.
Related: Who killed Berta Cáceres? Behind the brutal murder of an environment crusader
Continue reading...NZ puts hard cap on emissions for first time to strengthen its trading scheme
NZ moves to strengthen its Emissions Trading Scheme, introducing emissions caps for the first time, but agriculture remains exempt.
The post NZ puts hard cap on emissions for first time to strengthen its trading scheme appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Even with rooftop solar boom, households are paying dearly for what lies beneath
Australians have led the world in solar installations on their rooftops, but lag way behind in terms of what they do under the roof. And it's costing them dearly.
The post Even with rooftop solar boom, households are paying dearly for what lies beneath appeared first on RenewEconomy.