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CP Daily: August 1, 2019
NA Markets: WCI continues to drop, RGGI slips on emissions data
Massachusetts power generators remain well under 2019 GWSA carbon limit
Greta Thunberg hits back at Andrew Bolt for 'deeply disturbing' column
Campaigner calls out ‘hate and conspiracy campaigns’ after Australian’s attack
The teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg has hit back at the Australian News Corp columnist Andrew Bolt for writing a deeply offensive column that mocked her autism diagnosis.
The Swedish schoolgirl posted a tweet overnight calling out the “hate and conspiracy campaigns” run by climate deniers like Bolt, adopting his insult that she was “deeply disturbed” and turning it back on him.
Continue reading...Pollutionwatch: James Lovelock still right on summer smog
In 1973, scientist concluded that controlling UK air pollution needed Europe-wide cooperation
July’s record-breaking temperatures brought summertime smog to most of the UK. Worst affected was eastern England, from Kent to Yorkshire, where air pollution reached seven on the government’s10-point scale.
The heatwave occurred just before the 100th birthday of the scientist James Lovelock. Best known for his Gaia theory, which hypothesises that life on Earth acts as a self-regulating system, Lovelock was also an atmospheric scientist. In 1973 he was part of a team investigating summertime smog in the UK and Ireland. Up until then the idea that the UK, with its damp grey summers, could experience smog like Los Angeles was thought so improbable that no one had made measurements to check. Lovelock and team set up a line of measurement sites from a water tower in Sibton, Suffolk, to Adrigole, near Cork. Not only was there enough smog in the UK to breach US health limits but it was taking days to form in the air, sometimes from sources up to 620 miles (1,000km) away in continental Europe.
Continue reading...Milky Way galaxy is warped and twisted, not flat
2℃ of global warming would put pressure on Melbourne's water supply
Coalition's emissions reduction fund labelled 'a joke' after first post-election auction
Government spends less than $1m for cut equivalent to only 0.01% of Australia’s annual greenhouse gas pollution
The Morrison government’s main climate change policy, the emissions reduction fund, has been labelled “a joke” after its latest auction bought cuts equivalent to only 0.01% of Australia’s annual greenhouse gas pollution.
While the prime minister, Scott Morrison, announced prior to the election that the policy would get an additional $2bn funding, the first post-election auction from the fund dedicated less than $1m to just three emissions reduction projects.
Continue reading...Dam at Whaley Bridge in Peak District threatens to burst – video
Residents of Whaley Bridge, Derbyshire, have been evacuated and told to make arrangements to stay elsewhere 'for a number of days' after heavy rain damaged the dam holding back the Toddbrook reservoir, leaving it at risk of collapse.
Continue reading...North Atlantic right whales in crisis - and the people risking lives to save them
RGGI emissions crater in Q2 2019 on thin Maryland and New York output
Energy Insiders Podcast: Coalition’s revenge on RET, Labor’s solar stumble
The big talking point at Clean Energy Summit was the absence of the Coalition government and the lack of network planning. Meanwhile, Lily D’Ambrosio defends solar rebate.
The post Energy Insiders Podcast: Coalition’s revenge on RET, Labor’s solar stumble appeared first on RenewEconomy.
AI system 'should be recognised as inventor'
Climate Consultant & Sales Manager (Climate Neutral, Green Energy), First Climate – Bad Vilbel, Germany
Practice Leader, Carbon Finance, First Climate – Zurich
And then there were four: RWE announces UK coal plant closure
EU Midday Market Brief
New Zealand to cancel over 16 mln privately held Kyoto units next year
Use your waste water to save street trees, experts urge
Dishwater and bathwater can be used to give vital support that councils often cannot afford to young trees
Instead of letting your dirty dishwater go down the drain, consider using it to water the trees on your street. That is the message from tree experts, who say survival rates for urban trees could be boosted significantly by volunteers.
Russell Miller, a London-based arboricultural consultant, said: “If you plant trees from good stock, at the right time, and provide enough water, you’d lose almost none prematurely. But get that wrong, and more than half can die.”
Continue reading...