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Successful environmental projects benefit nature and people, study finds
‘Integrated’ work to help biodiversity and tackle climate crisis can also benefit humanity, says Dr Trisha Gopalakrishna
Restoring and protecting the world’s forests is crucial if humanity is to stop the worst effects of climate breakdown and halt the extinction of rare species.
Researchers have been concerned, however, that actions to capture carbon, restore biodiversity and find ways to support the livelihoods of the people who live near and in the forests might be at odds.
Continue reading...Reservoir of liquid water found deep in Martian rocks
Reservoir of liquid water found deep in Martian rocks
‘Integrated’ forest restoration projects could highly benefit biodiversity, climate, and people -study
The Guardian view on nature-friendly farming: England’s green subsidies are working | Editorial
Wildlife has benefited from the post-Brexit farm payments system, strengthening the case for an extension
Creating the right habitats with public money is helping to stop nature’s decline or even reverse it. That’s the good news from Natural England, which reports more butterflies, bees, bats and birds whizzing around the countryside after the promotion of nature-friendly farming schemes. The body, which advises the government on biodiversity, published research earlier this month showing that the environmental land management scheme (Elms), set up after the UK left the EU, has had beneficial effects.
Unlike the common agricultural policy, which mainly subsidises landowners on the basis of acreage farmed, Elms payments were designed to promote nature. Wildlife has been massively depleted in recent decades due to intensified agriculture and the use of chemicals. Measures that qualify for this new form of support include hedgerow and peat conservation, the creation of landscapes for skylarks and organic fruit-growing.
Continue reading...Demand for cheap offsets by major companies ‘undermines’ climate integrity of voluntary carbon market – report
BRIEFING: First SAF plant launches converting CO2, H2 to jet fuel in single step
VCM Report: Surprise sell-off in N-GEO futures sees contract dip below physical levels
Aviation needs more CORSIA carbon credit supply to decarbonise -IATA
Projects with up to 3.5 mln hectares preparing to generate biodiversity credits -research
EU General Court to rule on ETS preliminary cases
DATA DIVE: CCP-tagged voluntary carbon credits see lift in retirements, defy summer slump
BECCS holds high potential for emission cuts, profit gains -report
FEATURE: Entities risk missing first ETS2 deadlines with national laws yet to be set
German fund pilots biodiversity credit methodology to scale African market
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Carbon ETF leaves Australian exchange after losses, lack of interest
I swam in the Thames last week. Yes, it is full of sewage – but it is also a beautiful river | Nell Frizzell
The Thames is often treated badly: pumped with effluent by water companies and viewed as just a geographical gap or dividing line. It is worth remembering its magic
Pull on your effluent suits and ring the sewage bell because, friends, Thames Water is being fined. Or at least it might be. The industry regulator, Ofwat, finally said out loud what we have all known for some time: that the privatised water company has been pumping raw sewage into our waterways for years. As a consequence, the company is facing a fine of £104m; just to put that number into context, according to the BBC, Thames Water reported an increase in annual profits to £157.3m last year, but is also facing a debt of £15.2bn. It makes huge profits and has no money; it’s almost as if turning one of life’s most essential building blocks into a commodity to be distributed for private gain wasn’t a great idea in the first place.
The thing about the Thames is that many of us – particularly residents of London and the towns and cities further upstream – don’t really think of it as a river at all. We treat it as a geographical gap; a dividing line between north and south, or between local wards, or between different demographics. It might be scattered with boats, sure, but it’s also scattered with plastic bottles, old shopping trolleys, timber pallets and crisp packets, just like any rundown city car park or alleyway. But the Thames is a river. In many ways, it is one of the most beautiful rivers in Britain; aesthetically and for all the history and culture it holds.
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