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Solar plus storage in Nevada to “fill the gap” left by retiring coal

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-28 14:03

Two big solar and battery storage projects will replace a 522MW coal generator due to retire soon in Nevada.

The post Solar plus storage in Nevada to “fill the gap” left by retiring coal appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Can solar and farming co-exist? Dutch trial hopes to prove a perfect match

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-28 13:58

Vattenfall to trial a solar farm that will be combined with Dutch strip farming practices for organic crops.

The post Can solar and farming co-exist? Dutch trial hopes to prove a perfect match appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Solar developer sues to stop offshore wind farm to protect his views

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-28 13:54

Head of solar developer sues against the construction of an offshore wind farm, apparently because he is worried about the view.

The post Solar developer sues to stop offshore wind farm to protect his views appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Solar tax debate needs government intervention, not a push-poll

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-28 13:01

Responsible governments should be demanding an explanation of why supposed customer and welfare advocacy has gone so badly off the rails.

The post Solar tax debate needs government intervention, not a push-poll appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Spark opens its books after suitors lift bid to more than $5 billion

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-28 12:13

Energy Distribution Network - Electricity Pylons against Orange - optimisedSpark Infrastructure to open its books to suitors after KKR consortium lifted its bid for the network and renewables investor to $5.2 billion.

The post Spark opens its books after suitors lift bid to more than $5 billion appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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CP Daily: Tuesday July 27, 2021

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-07-28 11:37
A daily summary of our news plus bite-sized updates from around the world.
Categories: Around The Web

More livestock, more carbon dioxide, less ice: the world's climate change progress since 2019 is (mostly) bad news

The Conversation - Wed, 2021-07-28 10:45
But with new commitments getting made by governments all over the world, we hope to see this progress improve soon. Thomas Newsome, Academic Fellow, University of Sydney Christopher Wolf, Postdoctoral Scholar, Oregon State University William Ripple, Distinguished Professor and Director, Trophic Cascades Program, Oregon State University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Electric car charging prices 'must be fair' say MPs

BBC - Wed, 2021-07-28 10:23
Consumers should not have to pay excessive prices to use public car charging, MPs say.
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Great Solar Business Podcast: The secrets to scaling up your solar business

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-28 10:19

building infrastructure zero emissions Solar Panel and Workers - optimisedKarl Brown from Instyle Solar on the myriad of challenges to overcome.

The post Great Solar Business Podcast: The secrets to scaling up your solar business appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Critical measures of global heating reaching tipping point, study finds

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-07-28 10:00

Carbon emissions, ocean acidification, Amazon clearing all hurtling toward new records

A new study tracking the planet’s vital signs has found that many of the key indicators of the global climate crisis are getting worse and either approaching, or exceeding, key tipping points as the earth heats up.

Overall, the study found some 16 out of 31 tracked planetary vital signs, including greenhouse gas concentrations, ocean heat content and ice mass, set worrying new records.

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Scientists demand urgent action after Covid-19 did little to slow climate emergency

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-28 10:00

climate protest - sydney - michael mazengarb - optimisedScientists call for three-pronged action on emissions after new research finds Covid-19 did little to slow climate emergency.

The post Scientists demand urgent action after Covid-19 did little to slow climate emergency appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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EU power sector emissions lag post-pandemic electricity demand recovery -report

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-07-28 09:01
The EU’s power sector CO2 emissions rose 11% year-on-year in H1 but remain well below pre-pandemic levels despite a near-full recovery in electricity demand as cleaner forms of generation prevail, according to a report published on Wednesday.
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UK’s “inconsistent, regressive” carbon pricing system needs reform to reach 2050 net zero -think-tank

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-07-28 09:01
The UK’s current carbon pricing measures are “inconsistent, regressive, unclear, and cannot put the country on the path to reach net zero emissions by 2050”, a think-tank said Wednesday, urging wide-ranging reforms to the system.
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Octogenarian Oxford grad returned to jail for not repaying profits from forest carbon investment fraud

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-07-28 07:59
An octogenarian Oxford alumnus has been handed a longer prison sentence for not complying with a confiscation order to repay ill-gotten gains from an investment fraud related to the reforestation carbon market.
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Artificial refuges are a popular stopgap for habitat destruction, but the science isn't up to scratch

The Conversation - Wed, 2021-07-28 05:54
New research reviewed more than 200 studies, and found the science underpinning artificial refuges — think nest boxes and artificial burrows — must be improved. Darcy Watchorn, PhD Candidate, Deakin University Dale Nimmo, Associate Professor in Ecology, Charles Sturt University Mitchell Cowan, PhD Candidate, Charles Sturt University Tim Doherty, ARC DECRA Fellow, University of Sydney Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Aggressive marketing has driven the rise of the double-cab ute on New Zealand streets — time to hit the brakes?

The Conversation - Wed, 2021-07-28 05:27
Eight of the ten top-selling passenger vehicles in New Zealand are now utes or SUVs. With carbon emissions reduction an urgent priority, that’s not a sustainable trend. Kirsty Wild, Senior Research Fellow, Public Health, University of Auckland Alistair Woodward, Professor, School of Population Health, University of Auckland Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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EU selects first carbon-cutting projects under Innovation Fund

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-07-28 03:33
The EU has committed €118 million to 32 small-scale carbon-cutting projects across 14 nations under its ETS-funded Innovation Fund, the bloc’s executive said on Tuesday as it announced the financing vehicle's first awards.
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RFS Market: RINs lift to month high on import flows

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-07-28 03:11
US biofuel credit (RIN) prices went on the upswing over the past week as traders pointed to a diesel arbitrage and gasoline import data as supporting factors for the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) market.
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UK government backs scheme for motorway cables to power lorries

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-07-28 01:55

E-highway study given £2m to draw up plans for overhead electric cables on motorway near Scunthorpe

The government will fund the design of a scheme to install overhead electric cables to power electric lorries on a motorway near Scunthorpe, as part of a series of studies on how to decarbonise road freight.

The electric road system – or e-highway – study, backed with £2m of funding, will draw up plans to install overhead cables on a 20km (12.4 miles) stretch of the M180 near Scunthorpe, in Lincolnshire. If the designs are accepted and building work is funded the trucks could be on the road by 2024.

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Categories: Around The Web

Don’t blame men for the climate crisis – we should point the finger at corporations

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-07-28 01:30

Male spending – on petrol and meat – is apparently worse for the environment than women’s. But it’s the system, not individuals, that needs to change

Sorry, boys, but it’s all your fault. Melting ice caps, flash floods, rising sea levels: men are to blame for the lot of it. Please don’t drown the messenger, I’m just relaying the results of a Swedish study that found that men’s spending habits cause 16% more climate-heating emissions than women’s. The biggest difference seems to be that men spend more money on petrol. Another big difference: the men surveyed bought more meat than women. So this is the way the world ends, eh? Not with a bang, but with blokes eating too many burgers.

I don’t know how many studies published in the Journal of Industrial Ecology go viral, but this paper has had an enormous amount of traction. Of course, this is largely because its findings leant themselves to delicious clickbait such as Men Are Worse for Climate Change Than Women Because They Love Meat and Cars. To be fair, the study didn’t lean into gender war territory in the way you would expect based on the headlines it generated. Gender wasn’t even mentioned in the paper’s title, which was “Shifting expenditure on food, holidays, and furnishings could lower greenhouse gas emissions by almost 40%”.

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