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Delays flagged for South Australia’s biggest wind project as damages claims prop up Neoen earnings
The post Delays flagged for South Australia’s biggest wind project as damages claims prop up Neoen earnings appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Energy Insiders Podcast: The extraordinary solar and battery boom in the Texas oil state
The post Energy Insiders Podcast: The extraordinary solar and battery boom in the Texas oil state appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Washington state reports funding cuts if cap-and-trade scrapped, think-tank claims shortcomings in govt analysis
WCI Markets: CCAs contained below WCAs all week
Interest in CCS piqued by EPA power plant rule, but legal questions stymie development -panellists
Mexican ETS framework one step away from publication as private sector interest grows
US federal CCS support unlikely to be deterred by potential Trump presidency, experts say
Olympic demand for ‘unproven’ ice therapy is unsustainable, scientists say
Researchers say 650 tonnes on order for Paris Games is a potential stress on local and regional resources
From cold-water swimming to ice baths, deliberately freezing yourself has been hailed as a panacea for everything from menopause symptoms to arthritis, headaches and immunity conditions.
And for sportspeople, ice is widely used to aid recovery after exercise. But now researchers have said the clinical benefits of ice therapy are not evidence-based and its popularity is bad for the environment.
Continue reading...Denmark ‘very concerned’ about draft EU aviation climate reporting rules
How old, inefficient housing and time-of-use electricity rates are leaving some households worse off
Landmark new research shows how global warming is messing with our rainfall
Timber venues, river swimming and re-use: how the Paris Olympics is going green – and what it’s missing
Futures exchange suspends December 2024 CORSIA futures contract
Verra’s Board of Directors appoints one of its members as new CEO
UN chief urges wealthy countries to beat fossil fuel ‘addiction’ amid expansions
Secretary general said wealthiest countries are ‘signing away our future’ with more production and called for phase-out of fossil fuels
The world’s wealthiest countries are “signing away our future” by leading a “flood” of expansion in fossil fuel activity that threatens worsening heatwaves and other climate impacts that imperil billions of people, the head of the United Nations has warned.
António Guterres, secretary general of the UN, on Thursday called on countries to “fight the disease” of the world’s “addiction” to coal, oil and gas, warning that tumbling heat records this week must spur rich nations to lead the way in phasing out fossil fuels.
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