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Fiji looks to launch national registry this year

Carbon Pulse - 28 min 40 sec ago
Fiji is aiming to launch a public registry for its carbon projects by late 2025 in order to record free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) processes in a transparent way, according to industry groups working in the Pacific island nation.
Categories: Around The Web

Bills against CO2 pipelines gain traction in South Dakota

Carbon Pulse - 1 hour 6 min ago
As a major CO2 pipeline developer awaits a construction permit in South Dakota, state legislators made progress with efforts to halt such initiatives until federal regulations are in place.
Categories: Around The Web

EU handing out too many free carbon permits to heavy industry, says report

Carbon Pulse - 1 hour 37 min ago
The EU is giving away too many free carbon permits to heavy industry in some cases, effectively subsidising some of the bloc's most emissions-intensive sectors, a report from green groups has found.
Categories: Around The Web

Delaware bill aims to redirect RGGI proceeds to assist low-income households

Carbon Pulse - 1 hour 50 min ago
A Delaware lawmaker has introduced a bill that would direct RGGI revenues to newly established and existing funds dedicated to assisting low-income households pay their electric bills.
Categories: Around The Web

California Democrats reintroduce effort to claim damages from fossil fuel companies

Carbon Pulse - 3 hours 54 sec ago
Democrats introduced two joint bills in the California Senate and Assembly on Friday seeking to claim compensation for alleged climate damages from fossil fuel companies.
Categories: Around The Web

Most conservation funds go to large vertebrates at expense of ‘neglected’ species

The Guardian - 4 hours 38 min ago

Study shows funding bias towards animals like rhino while other endangered species including amphibians and algae disregarded

Most global conservation funds go to larger, charismatic animals, leaving critically important but less fashionable species deprived, a 25-year study has revealed.

Scientists have found that of the $1.963bn allocated to projects worldwide, 82.9% was assigned to vertebrates. Plants and invertebrates each accounted for 6.6% of the funding, while fungi and algae were barely represented at less than 0.2%.

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Categories: Around The Web

Farmers, investors, miners and parents: how unconventional climate advocates can reach new audiences

The Conversation - 5 hours 29 min ago
About 40% of Australians don’t believe humans are a major cause of climate change. Reaching these sceptic holdout groups may require unconventional approaches. Xiongzhi Wang, Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Environmental Social Science, Australian National University Kelly Fielding, Professor of Environmental Psychology, The University of Queensland Rebecca Colvin, Associate Professor in Social Science, Australian National University Robyn Gulliver, Honorary Research Fellow in Social Science, The University of Queensland Winnifred Louis, Professor of Social Psychology, The University of Queensland Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Brazilian forest restoration finance coalition gains new members

Carbon Pulse - 7 hours 32 min ago
A Brazilian coalition for nature restoration and bioeconomy finance that launched last year, aiming to reduce CO2 emissions by 1 gigatonne by 2050, last week welcomed two new members.
Categories: Around The Web

BRIEFING: Path to SAF uptake lined with taxes on fossil jet fuel, flight surcharges, say analysts

Carbon Pulse - 7 hours 39 min ago
Surcharges on flights to account for the cost of sustainable aviation fuel will become "relatively common practice" by 2030, while taxing fossil jet fuel could also be on the cards as a way to reduce the cost difference between traditional and clean methods, said analysts during an energy forum in London.
Categories: Around The Web

VCM Report: Huge volume of REDD carbon credits retired by oil major, VCMI switches direction

Carbon Pulse - 7 hours 56 min ago
An oil and gas major retired a huge number of REDD carbon credits to keep the market ticking over, while the Voluntary Carbon Markets Integrity Initiative (VCMI) signalled a shift of direction in a bid to kick start wider participation in the market.
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LATAM Roundup: Breakthrough in Paraguay as govt moves to create carbon hub

Carbon Pulse - 8 hours 47 min ago
A long-awaited carbon markets regulation to implement Paraguay’s 2023 law and support the creation of a domestic trading hub launched last week, as Chile saw late-stage approval of its own standard, and Brazilian biofuels entered the crosshairs of US tariffs.
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FEATURE: Oil majors tout CCS as only option to decarbonise UK’s hard-to-abate industries

Carbon Pulse - 9 hours 54 min ago
A clear UK plan to spearhead development of carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects is urgently needed to decarbonise hard-to-abate industries and to achieve the 2030 clean power goal, according to the oil majors behind CCS clusters in England.
Categories: Around The Web

Ukraine approves roadmap for national ETS

Carbon Pulse - 9 hours 56 min ago
Ukraine has approved a roadmap for setting up a national emissions trading system (ETS) – although it would not become fully operational until the country's war-torn economy has recovered, the environment minister has announced.
Categories: Around The Web

Study flags gaps in research on chemical pollution impacts on biodiversity

Carbon Pulse - 10 hours 4 min ago
There is a misalignment between studies of chemical impacts on nature and biodiversity measurements, according to a study led by the EU Commission's Joint Research Centre (JRC).
Categories: Around The Web

Scottish nature law proposals trigger biodiversity credit concerns

Carbon Pulse - 10 hours 10 min ago
The Scottish government’s proposals to give politicians the power to modify key environmental legislation have triggered biodiversity credit concerns from a market actor.
Categories: Around The Web

A frog: their eyes can detect a single photon of light | Helen Sullivan

The Guardian - 10 hours 38 min ago

Their metamorphosis seems more like a human’s than a butterfly’s – so much is visible, and awkward, whereas the butterfly forms in secret

Some species of frog have eyes so sensitive to light that they can detect a single photon. To confirm this, scientists dissected a frog’s eye and removed the lens. If you dissected eyes in biology class, you may remember that a lens is extraordinarily simple, and unlike other organs. It is a hard, clearish, object that comes out clean: no blood supply, no blood. It looks like a glass bead, and functions – inanimate – much like glass, and not like most things we find in our body (except maybe teeth, which function like knives). Look through the lens at the classroom around you, you will see it clearly, but upside down.

A frog in space, moving further and further from the sun, would eventually start to see not a shrinking star, but tiny flashes of light: individual photons. This is because as the photons travel further from their source, they are spread over greater areas: they will hit a frog’s eye less and less often.

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Categories: Around The Web

BRIEFING: EU’s clean industry push lacks ‘game-changer’ on energy, critics say

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-24 23:09
The European Commission’s upcoming Clean Industrial Deal initiative, due on Wednesday, lacks “game-changing” measures to reduce energy prices, such as a reform of the marginal pricing system for electricity, say EU steelmakers and trade unions.
Categories: Around The Web

Euro Markets: Midday Update

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-24 23:02
European carbon prices gave up Friday's gains as an early boost from Germany's general election result was quickly wiped out, while natural gas continued its 10-day decline that has seen regional prices for the fuel drop by 23%.
Categories: Around The Web

Antioxidants in fruits and flowers seem to counteract harmful effects of microplastics, study shows

The Guardian - Mon, 2025-02-24 22:00

Anthocyanins in nuts, fruits and vegetables seem to lesson harmful effects of microplastics on reproductive systems

Antioxidants that give fruits and flowers their vibrant colors seem to counteract some of the most dangerous reproductive system effects of exposure to microplastics, such as decreased fertility, and could ultimately be used in developing treatments, new peer-reviewed research shows.

The paper focused on microplastics’ reproductive toxicity and plant compounds called anthocyanins, which are widely found in nuts, fruits and vegetables. The new review of scientific literature on anthocyanins found that the compounds are probably protective against a range of plastic-induced impacts on hormones, reductions in testosterone and estrogen, decreased sperm counts, lower sperm quality, erectile dysfunction and ovarian damage.

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Categories: Around The Web

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