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Study on Australia’s human-induced regeneration projects based on CEAs finds massive historical overcrediting
Paris finance reforms could untie poor countries’ hands in climate crisis
Changes to the World Bank could unlock developing states access to loans and to the means of staving off disaster
The Netherlands has almost the same amount of solar generating capacity as the whole continent of Africa. That must be, in part, because the interest on a loan to set up a windfarm in Africa is about 17% more than one to do the same in Europe.
Many poor countries enjoy vast natural resources of wind and sun yet struggle to access renewable energy because of the crippling cost of capital imposed on them. Private sector companies perceive far greater risk in poor countries, penalising most heavily the countries in greatest need of investment.
Continue reading...Titan sub CEO dismissed safety warnings as 'baseless cries', emails show
The sudden warming of Britain’s seas will tear through ocean life like a wildfire | Philip Hoare
What happens when the chill of our seas turns to a soupy stew? Fragile ecosystems will be destroyed and food sources for wildlife will disappear
Last weekend, at the very easternmost edge of England, tens of thousands of people of all ages gathered at a beach festival in Lowestoft to celebrate the sea joyously. To dance to trance music and listen to Linton Kwesi Johnson recite his poetry, and to hear marine scientists explain to seven-year-olds exactly why the sea smells the way it does. It was an idyllic scene. From dusk to dawn and back again, everyone was drawn to the vast and glorious element that connects us to the rest of the world.
But then, amid the revelry, a solemn procession appeared. Two dozen festivalgoers carried a series of blown-up photographs into the sea. They were portraits by the artist Gideon Mendel of people, many of them from the global south, standing amid the floods that had overturned their lives. Suddenly, in the face of their fates, the sea seemed not so benign after all. It was a reminder that sea levels are rising around the world; and that here in the UK we face our own potential disaster – the drastic sudden warming of the sea off Britain and Ireland.
Continue reading...Macron forces through climate finance reform ‘consensus’, leaves concrete decisions for later
Halt new roads and developments adding to emissions, advisers to tell UK government
Committee on Climate Change report likely to recommend ending road-building programme
The government should halt all new roads unless there are exceptional circumstances, the government’s climate advisers are likely to say next week.
On Wednesday the Committee on Climate Change will publish its latest report on the UK’s progress in dealing with the climate crisis. Speaking at Glastonbury on Friday, the climate change committee chair, Lord Deben, said new roads inevitably increased traffic and emissions.
Continue reading...*Senior Program Officer, Industrial Innovations, Verra – Remote (Worldwide)
*Manager, Energy and Industrial Innovation, Verra – Remote (Worldwide)
*Senior Program Officer, VCS Methodologies, Verra – Remote (Worldwide)
FEATURE: Bubbling under – EU taps geothermal heat as ‘model’ facility delvers scale
Finance Manager, LATAM, Taking Root – Vancouver/Calgary/Remote (Canada)
We were afraid for the Titan five. But this story generated an uglier emotion, too: excitement | Bryony Clarke
Passengers aboard the sub lost on a dive to the Titanic became characters in a tragic drama. The rest of us were spectators
Finally, we know. The discovery of debris on the seafloor – confirming that the missing OceanGate Titan submersible probably disintegrated in an instantaneous implosion on the same day that it disappeared – brings to a bleak end the mystery that has horrified and mesmerised people across the globe.
The plight of the five passengers – the British adventurer Hamish Harding, the businessman Shahzada Dawood and his teenage son Suleman, the French veteran explorer Paul-Henri Nargeolet and OceanGate’s CEO, Stockton Rush – has dominated front pages everywhere and spurred an international response that involved four countries and may have cost millions of dollars.
Bryony Clarke is an assistant letters editor at the Guardian
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Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
Japan’s MOL, Chevron Singapore sign agreement to tackle shipping decarbonisation
COP28 boss underlines important role of voluntary carbon market for global climate goals
Orcas nudge rudder of yacht near Gibraltar – video
A yacht competing in the Ocean Race had a close encounter with orcas on their approach to the strait of Gibraltar on Thursday, when the animals began nudging at its rudders. There were no injuries to the crew or damage to the boat. The Ocean Race said that ‘orca attacks’ on boats in the area around Gibraltar, where an individual or pod of orcas ram into a boat's hull or rudders, have become more common with boats being significantly damaged in some cases
Continue reading...Governments at Paris summit to finalise climate finance roadmap
Almost 40 leaders to present plans for overhaul of public financial institutions including World Bank
Questions over a tax on global shipping and other big sources of greenhouse gas emissions, and how countries should go about setting up a loss and damage fund continue to be the subject of fierce discussion, as governments meet in Paris to prepare an overhaul of global development and climate finance.
Nearly 40 heads of state and government and a similar number of ministers and high-level representatives will finalise a roadmap for the reform of the world’s public finance institutions, including the World Bank, and of overseas aid and climate finance.
Continue reading...The week in wildlife – in pictures
The best of this week’s wildlife photographs, including busy bees, a peregrine falcon and wild horses
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