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Offshore wind zone shrunk and pushed further out to sea to protect penguins, reefs and whales
The post Offshore wind zone shrunk and pushed further out to sea to protect penguins, reefs and whales appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Drones reveal Antarctic whale 'acrobatics'
Traders add longer-dated vintages, mostly reduce V24s across North American carbon markets
California Legislature passes 2024-25 budget, allocates $40 mln for carbon removal
WCI Q3 auction volume dips to lowest offered YtD
Canadian emissions and GDP higher in 2030 without carbon pricing -government data
Fate of EU nature law hangs in the balance at Monday ministerial meeting
CF NORTH AMERICA: Longer term strategy necessary in maturing VCM, experts say
VCM activity plummeted in May, ahead of first CCP integrity label approval
Germany’s top climate envoy says ‘this is the critical decade’ after Dutton ditches 2030 target
Representative from Europe’s biggest economy and key player in global climate talks says deep emissions cuts by 2030 ‘essential’ to limit climate heating to 1.5C
Germany’s climate envoy has dismissed claims the Paris agreement is only about reaching net zero emissions by 2050, warning that deep cuts by 2030 are “essential” and scientific evidence shows “this is the critical decade” to act on global heating.
Australia’s opposition leader, Peter Dutton, has refused to commit to a 2030 emissions reduction target prior to the next national election, prompting claims from Labor, the Greens and independents that the Coalition isn’t serious about acting on the climate crisis.
Continue reading...INTERVIEW: Behavioural analysis of EUA trading strategies needed as power sector decarbonises
FEATURE: Nature tech startups sit tight on biodiversity monitoring amid concerns over lack of investment
Japanese carbon developer teams up with provincial govt for rice projects in Vietnam
BRIEFING: Companies risk being ‘locked out’ of carbon removal market if they do not buy credits now
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Wildlife experts urge action on pesticides as UK insect populations plummet
Campaigners say next government must reduce use and toxicity of pesticides before it is too late
The UK’s insect populations are declining at alarming rates and the next government must put in place plans to monitor and reduce the use and toxicity of pesticides before it is too late, wildlife experts say.
In recent years, concerns have been raised over earthworm populations, which have fallen by a third in the past 25 years. A citizen science project that monitors flying insects in the UK, meanwhile, found a 60% decline between 2004 and 2021. The overall trajectory, as government monitoring figures show, has been downwards since the 1970s.
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