Feed aggregator
CFTC: Investors shorten exposure to US compliance carbon markets under threat of potential federal legal action
Colorado considers stricter landfill methane standard
Canada's top candidates talk up fossil fuels as climate slips down agenda
Canada's top candidates talk up fossil fuels as climate slips down agenda
The home stretch of the energy election: Coalition chooses to gaslight as Trump, Musk loom large
The post The home stretch of the energy election: Coalition chooses to gaslight as Trump, Musk loom large appeared first on RenewEconomy.
RGGI Market: RGAs recover 15% WoW after historic tumble
US appeals court temporarily halts order to unfreeze federal climate funds
Experts flag legal challenges for US-based marine carbon removal projects
Fossil fuel companies ‘poisoned the well’ of public debate with climate disinformation. Here’s how Australia can break free
Banned DDT discovered in Canadian trout 70 years after use, research finds
Potential danger to humans and wildlife from harmful pesticide discovered in fish at 10 times safety limit
Residues of the insecticide DDT have been found to persist at “alarming rates” in trout even after 70 years, potentially posing a significant danger to humans and wildlife that eat the fish, research has found.
Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, known as DDT, was used on forested land in New Brunswick, Canada, from 1952 to 1968. The researchers found traces of it remained in brook trout in some lakes, often at levels 10 times higher than the recommended safety threshold for wildlife.
Continue reading...What is Earth Day and what has it achieved?
EU emerges as rule-setter in carbon removals, as US shifts to state-led policy -report
Microsoft buys carbon removal credits from reforestation across US coal mining lands
Climate community pays tribute to late Pope Francis
BRIEFING: Spanish blue carbon standard advances as experts warn of greenwashing risk
Tech giant’s CDR headline buying masks lack of new investors, warns report
The Trump administration is sabotaging your scientific data | Jonathan Gilmour
Burying our heads in the sand won’t stop the climate crisis or pandemics. We’re taking action to preserve government tools
United States science has propelled the country into its current position as a powerhouse of biomedical advancements, technological innovation and scientific research. The data US government agencies produce is a crown jewel – it helps us track how the climate is changing, visualize air pollution in our communities, identify challenges to our health and provide a panoply of other essential uses. Climate change, pandemics and novel risks are coming for all of us – whether we bury our heads in the sand or not – and government data is critical to our understanding of the risks these challenges bring and how to address them.
Much of this data remains out of sight to those who don’t use it, even though they benefit us all. Over the past few months, the Trump administration has brazenly attacked our scientific establishment through agency firings, censorship and funding cuts, and it has explicitly targeted data the American taxpayers have paid for. They’re stealing from us and putting our health and wellbeing in danger – so now we must advocate for these federal resources.
Continue reading...