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New bioenergy carbon removals methodology approved by certifier
TNFD, ESRS release joint guidelines on corporate reporting
Future impact of proposed fossil fuel projects must be assessed, UK court rules
Landmark judgment says planning bodies must account for burning of extracted fuel when considering site proposals
The climate impact of burning coal, oil and gas must be taken into account when deciding whether to approve projects, the supreme court in London has ruled.
The landmark judgment, handed down on Thursday, sets an important precedent on whether the “inevitable” future greenhouse gas emissions of a fossil fuel project should be considered.
Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
OBC launches survey on biodiversity certificate claims to drive corporate demand
UBS invests in impact data provider to advance nature-related disclosures
Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market appoints first CEO
EU ETS more effective decarbonisation tool than Inflation Reduction Act, says bank analyst
Iberian lynx no longer endangered after numbers improve in Spain and Portugal
The animal, which is still categorised as ‘vulnerable’, has been the subject of a 20-year conservation programme
Less than a quarter of a century after the Iberian lynx was feared to be only a whisker away from extinction, populations of the animal have recovered enough across Spain and Portugal for it to be moved from “endangered” to “vulnerable” on the global red list of threatened species.
The change in status, announced on Thursday by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (ICUN), is the result of a two-decade-long effort from a coalition of partners including the EU and regional and national governments in Spain and Portugal, as well as wildlife NGOs and local people.
Continue reading...The Tories will leave one great green legacy that few noticed – Labour must build upon it | Rebecca Willis
This government had many climate failures, but its 2014 boost to green energy made the UK an offshore wind superpower
As day-trippers to the British seaside enjoy fish and chips and a bracing paddle, they may notice, as they gaze out to sea, one of the great hidden legacies of this Conservative government: offshore wind power. Turning steadily in the breeze, the vast array of offshore and onshore turbinesaround Great Britain provide about a quarter of our electricity needs, with no carbon emissions and at a cost below imported gas or nuclear generation. They are a national success story. We have the second biggest offshore turbine fleet in the world, behind only China.
The Tory government effectively banned onshore wind turbines in 2015. But at the same time, the growth in offshore wind can be traced back to a 2014 decision to establish a new support mechanism for low-carbon generation. Called “contracts for difference”, it guarantees a set price for units of electricity. If the market price falls below the set price, the generator receives a top-up payment. If the market price rises above the set price, the generator pays back the difference.
Rebecca Willis is professor of energy and climate governance at Lancaster University
Continue reading...Landmark ruling could threaten future UK oil drilling
Green ammonia key to unlocking Australia’s hydrogen superpower ambitions -analysis
Three-eyed koalas and Dutton as Snow White: how Simpsons memes have been weaponised in nuclear debate
Labor MPs tweet Simpsons jokes about nuclear policy after Dutton earlier conceded research found people ‘didn’t want a Springfield’ in their back yard
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Three-eyed koalas, Peter Dutton masquerading as Snow White in a “seven nukes” fairytale, and an arsenal of Simpsons gags to boot.
The Coalition is objecting about what they say are “juvenile” online memes from government MPs attacking its nuclear policy, as Labor MPs mount a social media attack on the opposition’s controversial and uncosted nuclear proposal.
Continue reading...Planes spray-painted at UK airfield where Just Stop Oil says Taylor Swift jet landed – video
Just Stop Oil activists have sprayed two jets with orange paint at a private airfield in Stansted where they say Taylor Swift's plane landed before her shows at Wembley stadium. The group said on X: 'Private jet users are responsible for up to 40x as much carbon emissions compared with a commercial flight'. The previous day, Just Stop Oil protesters sprayed Stonehenge with orange powder paint before the summer solstice
Continue reading...Deadly heat in Mexico and US made 35 times more likely by global heating
Researchers find extreme heat four times more likely than at turn of millennium and urge reduction in fossil fuels
The deadly heatwave that scorched large swaths of Mexico, Central America and the southern US in recent weeks was made 35 times more likely due to human-induced global heating, according to research by leading climate scientists from World Weather Attribution (WWA).
Tens of millions of people have endured dangerous day – and nighttime temperatures as a heat dome engulfed Mexico – a large and lingering zone of high pressure that stretched north to Texas, Arizona and Nevada, and south over Belize, Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador.
Continue reading...INTERVIEW: US developer enters Indian voluntary carbon market with rice methane offsetting projects
PNG cookstove project under updated Verra methodology to be issued half the credits originally planned
Santos “confident” it has enough ACCUs to meet projected Barossa Safeguard requirements
UK among rich countries not paying fair share to restore nature – report
Only two countries provide fair amount to compensate lower-income nations for biodiversity loss, with most paying less than half what they should, says ODI
The UK, Canada, New Zealand, Italy and Spain are among the rich countries contributing less than half their fair share of nature finance to poor countries, a new report has found.
Developed nations have agreed to collectively contribute a minimum of $20bn annually for nature restoration in low and middle-income countries by 2025. This money is in addition to the $100bn agreed for climate finance.
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