Around The Web
Australian developers renew push to earn carbon credits from killing camels
'This crisis has been unfolding for years': 4 photos of Australia from space, before and after the bushfires
SpaceX sends 60 more Starlink satellites into orbit
Don't like spiders? Here are 10 reasons to change your mind
There's no evidence 'greenies' block bushfire hazard reduction but here's a controlled burn idea worth trying
CP Daily: Monday January 6, 2020
California fuel emissions through September remain on par with 2018, as power continues to dip
Australia can expect far more fire catastrophes. A proper disaster plan is worth paying for
EU Market: EUAs retreat 3% as oil-led gains peter out, auctions loom
Spanish power emissions plummet in 2019
Climate17: Portfolio Manager – Oxford, UK
Climate17: Commodity Sales Trader, Environmental Products – London
Climate17: Sales Director, Carbon Offsetting – Oxford, UK
US airline JetBlue to offset all domestic flight emissions
Trump administration to overhaul environmental review regulations
Regulations would limit projects that require environmental review and no longer require agencies to weigh climate impacts
The Trump administration is set to unveil new regulations which would limit the types of projects like highways and pipelines that require environmental review and no longer require federal agencies to weigh their climate impacts, sources familiar with the plan said.
The proposed overhaul will update how federal agencies implement the bedrock National Environmental Policy Act (Nepa), a law meant to ensure the government protects the environment when reviewing or making decisions about major projects, from building roads and bridges, cutting forests, expanding broadband to approving interstate pipelines such as the Keystone XL.
Continue reading...Shutdown of US coal power facilities saved over 26,000 lives, study finds
Shift to gas saved more than 300m tons of planet-heating carbon dioxide as nitrogen dioxide and sulfur dioxide levels dropped
The human toll from coal-fired pollution in America has been laid bare by a study that has found more than 26,000 lives were saved in the US in just a decade due to the shift from coal to gas for electricity generation.
Continue reading...Urgent new ‘roadmap to recovery’ could reverse insect apocalypse
Phasing out synthetic pesticides and fertilisers and aggressive emission reductions among series of solutions outlined by scientists
The world must eradicate pesticide use, prioritise nature-based farming methods and urgently reduce water, light and noise pollution to save plummeting insect populations, according to a new “roadmap to insect recovery” compiled by experts.
The call to action by more than 70 scientists from across the planet advocates immediate action on human stress factors to insects which include habitat loss and fragmentation, the climate crisis, pollution, over-harvesting and invasive species.
Continue reading...Massachusetts’ second GWSA auction settles at secondary market levels
Plants before pandas: the young botanist tackling extinction in his own backyard – video
Almost as rare as the plants he protects, 24-year-old Josh Styles is not your average botanist. In 2017 he founded the North West Rare Plant Initiative, a conservation project in his local region. His aim is to resurrect 44 plant species that are extinct or threatened with extinction in the area, aiding biodiversity and battling the climate crisis. Richard Sprenger went to meet him in his natural habitat – the sand dunes and peat bogs of north-west England – to see the impact his work is having and find out why, when the Amazon rainforest is on fire, it still matters
- We are supporting four charities this year that are harnessing the power of nature of the climate crisis, just like Josh in this video. Click here to donate