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Low rooftop PV tariffs mean solar houses are subsidising everyone else’s power supply
The post Low rooftop PV tariffs mean solar houses are subsidising everyone else’s power supply appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Oregon DEQ proposes to delay NOx mandates for heavy-duty vehicles by one year
CFTC: Traders continue to reduce CCA exposure as emitters build RGGI, LFS shorts
Split US Supreme Court may rule against EPA in Clean Air Act venue question -expert
Federal court sends Native American climate lawsuit back to Washington state court
Republican congressmen introduce effort to repeal US EPA’s clean fuels programme
Rooftop solar will pave way for decarbonisation of buildings, ahead of EU ETS2 -report
Major voluntary carbon registries must embrace blockchain for market to scale, claims report
BRIEFING: EU Commission to present options for CBAM export compensation in May
Canadian company in negotiations with Trump to mine seabed
Environmentalists call bid to skirt UN treaty ‘reckless’ amid fears that mining will cause irreversible loss of biodiversity
A Canadian deep-sea mining firm has revealed it has been negotiating with the Trump administration to bypass a UN treaty and potentially gain authorisation from the US to mine in international waters.
The revelation has stunned environmentalists, who condemned the move as “reckless” and a “slap in the face for multilateralism”.
Continue reading...UK forest carbon standard to publish new crediting framework in July
Nature tech sector map reveals gaps in data management, access to monitoring tools
INTERVIEW: Outdated carbon metrics are failing to capture true impact of SLCPs
Rights to carbon credits ownership deterring farmers from VCM -experts
ERW could triple carbon removal potential when applied to forests -report
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Chief executive of carbon financier steps down amid cashflow squeeze
How to watch Saturday's partial solar eclipse
Export of endangered eels to Russia ends after UK government ban
British eel trader says move will destroy traditional elvering but campaigners welcome decision
Endangered eels caught in British estuaries will no longer be exported to Russia after the government banned the trade.
In a decision that Britain’s last remaining eel trader said would end centuries of traditional elvering, a request to dispatch millions of glass eels – young eels that develop into elvers – to a restocking project in Kaliningrad was refused by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra).
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