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Rooftop PV will soon eliminate demand in world’s biggest isolated grid. It needs a bigger battery
The post Rooftop PV will soon eliminate demand in world’s biggest isolated grid. It needs a bigger battery appeared first on RenewEconomy.
The UK’s last coal fired power plant takes final delivery of old fossils
The post The UK’s last coal fired power plant takes final delivery of old fossils appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Rising temperatures, increased wildfires signal shifting US climate -report
Origin takes a stake in “fast growing” industrial decarbonisation business
The post Origin takes a stake in “fast growing” industrial decarbonisation business appeared first on RenewEconomy.
“Off the charts:” Solar is about to leave nuclear and everything else in the shade
The post “Off the charts:” Solar is about to leave nuclear and everything else in the shade appeared first on RenewEconomy.
UK local government pension fund partnership taps asset managers for £300 mln timberland investment
EU surpasses 50 pct renewable power share for first time in first half of 2024, Germany at 65 pct
The post EU surpasses 50 pct renewable power share for first time in first half of 2024, Germany at 65 pct appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Panama launches emissions reporting platform as national carbon market takes form
US DFC backs $1 bln BTG Pactual-led Latin American reforestation effort with $50 mln investment
Canada’s planned landfill methane reduction regulation to cut 107 MtCO2e from 2025-40, reduce offset potential
Rising risks of climate disasters mean some communities will need to move – we need a national conversation about relocation now
Google data centres push emissions nearly 50% higher than 2019 levels as AI footprint grows
Verra’s new REDD methodology could leave projects issuing no voluntary carbon credits, warns assessement body
The Guardian view on Britain’s green future: where was the debate? | Editorial
The climate emergency should have been a more prominent theme during an underwhelming election campaign
For all the many televised encounters between party leaders, one huge subject has largely flown under the radar during this underwhelming election campaign. In 2019, at a time when the Brexit crisis had overwhelmed national politics, Channel 4 nevertheless devoted an entire pre-election debate to the climate emergency. Boris Johnson didn’t turn up. But, sensing the mood of the times, as prime minister he was soon committing to a “green industrial revolution”. Climate action was high-profile and it mattered.
Contrast that with last week’s final leaders’ debate between Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer. None of the questions selected from the audience addressed the environment. Aside from one attempt by Mr Sunak to suggest that Labour’s green plans will lead to higher taxes – feeding into the Conservative party’s wider attack strategy – both leaders focused their energy and political capital elsewhere. It has been much the same throughout the campaign. Economists, industrial leaders and environmental campaigners are united in their desire for more proactive green government. But the politics has become difficult.
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