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Tanzania earning just 3% of the projected revenue from carbon trade -report

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-04-21 22:44
Tanzania has lost over TZS 1.2 trillion ($455 million) in potential carbon trade revenue due to inadequacies of the organisation managing carbon trading operations in the nation, according to a recently released national audit report.
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INTERVIEW: Developing countries need national tools to supplement int’l climate finance

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-04-21 22:01
Amid huge shortfalls in international climate finance during a ‘triple crisis’ of nature, climate, and burdensome debt, developing countries must apply new models and policies to unlock domestic and private sector funding, according to the co-chair of a high-level expert review.
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Innovative ocean finance focus to increase, expert says

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-04-21 21:43
The focus on some marine financing mechanisms is set to ramp up in the next few months with pressure from key upcoming events, a blue finance expert has said.
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New UK seawater carbon capture and storage pilot starts operating

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-04-21 21:36
A pilot project to suck carbon out of the sea has started operating on the UK’s south coast.
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Korean companies accused of investing in ‘inflated’ cookstove carbon projects amid integrity concerns

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-04-21 20:30
A report released Monday said South Korean companies have invested in overseas cookstove projects that could have received as much as 18 times more carbon credits than the emissions reductions they actually achieved.
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Wave of Earth Day protests as Americans mobilize against Trump

The Guardian - Mon, 2025-04-21 20:00

Organizers team up with pro-democracy groups for flurry of actions to demand right to free, healthy lives

Hundreds of marches, pickets and cleanup events are taking place across the US in the run-up to Earth Day on Tuesday, as environmental and climate groups step up resistance to the Trump administration’s authoritarianism and its “war on the planet”.

A fortnight after the “Hands Off” mobilization brought millions to the streets, national and grassroots organizers are teaming up with pro-democracy groups for “All Out on Earth Day” – a wave of actions to demand the right to live free, healthy lives.

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Veteran returns to head up Australian bank’s emissions desk

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-04-21 19:47
A carbon product specialist has returned to the market after over a year’s absence to take up the position as head of emissions trading at one of Australia’s big four banks.
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Indigenous river campaigner from Peru wins prestigious Goldman prize

The Guardian - Mon, 2025-04-21 17:30

Mari Luz Canaquiri Murayari led a successful legal battle to protect the Marañon River in the Peruvian Amazon

An Indigenous campaigner and women’s leader from the Peruvian Amazon has been awarded the prestigious Goldman prize for environmental activists, after leading a successful legal campaign that led to the river where her people, the Kukama, live being granted legal personhood.

Mari Luz Canaquiri Murayari, 57, from the village of Shapajila on the Marañon River, led the Huaynakana Kamatahuara Kana (HKK) women’s association, supported by lawyers from Peru’s Legal Defence Institute, in a campaign to protect the river. After three years, judges in Loreto, Peru’s largest Amazon region, ruled in March 2024 that the Marañon had the right to be free-flowing and free of contamination, respecting an Indigenous worldview that regards a river as a living entity.

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Grassroots activists who took on corruption and corporate power share 2025 Goldman prize

The Guardian - Mon, 2025-04-21 17:30

Seven winners of environmental prize include Amazonian river campaigner and Tunisian who fought against organised waste trafficking

Grassroots activists who helped jail corrupt officials and obtain personhood rights for a sacred Amazonian river are among this year’s winners of the world’s most prestigious environmental prize.

The community campaigns led by the seven 2025 Goldman prize winners underscore the courage and tenacity of local activists willing to confront the toxic mix of corporate power, regulatory failures and political corruption that is fuelling biodiversity collapse, water shortages, deadly air pollution and the climate emergency.

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Japan to subsidise energy-based JCM projects with co-benefits

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-04-21 16:55
Japan is seeking project proposals that can provide benefits beyond emissions reductions under the bilateral Joint Crediting Mechanism (JCM).
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Could an almighty eruption destroy a dreamy Greek island?

BBC - Mon, 2025-04-21 09:59
Scientists are investigating for the first time how dangerous the island's next big one could be.
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Could AI text alerts help save snow leopards from extinction?

BBC - Mon, 2025-04-21 09:36
In Pakistan, it's hoped newly-developed AI cameras could warn villagers via text to move their livestock if snow leopards enter the area.
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‘Puppy blues’: how to cope with the exhaustion and stress of raising a puppy

The Conversation - Mon, 2025-04-21 06:07
Exhaustion. Sleep deprivation. Feeling depressed and guilty. Lingering doubts and regret. If you’ve had a puppy, this may all sound grimly familiar. Susan Hazel, Associate Professor, School of Animal and Veterinary Science, University of Adelaide Ana Goncalves Costa, Researcher, Animal Behaviour, Welfare and Anthrozoology Lab, University of Adelaide Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Australia’s biggest industrial polluter receives millions in carbon credits despite rising emissions

The Guardian - Mon, 2025-04-21 01:00

Safeguard mechanism revamp leads to overall emissions fall but 70% of coal and gas facilities covered by scheme increased direct pollution

Australia’s biggest industrial climate polluter – Chevron’s Gorgon gas export plant in Western Australia – received the equivalent of millions of dollars in carbon credits from the federal government last year, despite increasing its emissions.

The revelation in government data last week has sparked calls for changes to the safeguard mechanism, the government policy applied to the country’s 219 largest industrial climate polluting facilities.

Get Guardian Australia environment editor Adam Morton’s Clear Air column as an email

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Fifteen years after Deepwater Horizon, Trump is setting the stage for disaster | Terry Garcia

The Guardian - Sun, 2025-04-20 22:00

Cuts to science, environmental and safety agencies are a rejection of hard-won knowledge gained from studying the disaster that occurred 15 years ago

Last month, I joined nearly 500 former and current employees of National Geographic, where I was executive vice-president and chief science and exploration officer for 17 years, urging the institution to take a public stance against the Trump administration’s reckless attacks on science. Our letter pointed out that the programs being dismantled are “imperative for the success of our country’s economy and are the foundation of our progress and wellbeing. They make us safer, stronger and more prosperous.” We warned that gutting them is a recipe for disaster.

In the face of this danger, none of us can remain silent.

Terry Garcia was National Geographic’s executive vice-president and chief science and exploration officer for 17 years. He also served as the assistant secretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and deputy administrator of Noaa, as well as its general counsel

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British Steel must now join the modern economy, not be a prisoner of the old | Will Hutton

The Guardian - Sun, 2025-04-20 18:30

Lack of investment and vision has dogged UK industry, while China has literally forged ahead

The fate of incoming Labour business and industry secretaries seems to be to launch emergency rescue packages for industries that would otherwise face imminent closure.

Witness Jonathan Reynolds at last Saturday’s extraordinary parliamentary recall arguing for the legal right to take over the running of British Steel from its Chinese owner, Jingye, in order to save up to 3,500 jobs and Britain’s strategic capacity to make steel. And witness Tony Benn, in 1974, offering a financial lifeline to 3,000 workers forming a cooperative to save motorcycle manufacture at the failed BSA plant in Meriden, near Coventry.

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Oldest serving US astronaut returns to Earth on 70th birthday

BBC - Sun, 2025-04-20 14:05
A capsule with Don Pettit and his two Russian crewmates lands in Kazakhstan after a space station mission.
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