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Ukraine minister doubles down on 2035 coal phaseout ahead of recovery conference
Germany’s EEX to acquire Nasdaq’s European power, carbon trading businesses
UAE, Saudi firms sign deal to restore at least 5k hectares of mangroves in Kingdom
Former boss of voluntary carbon firm retakes reins as new CEO quits after 3 weeks
EU-wide new clean technology fund idea ditched due to budget pressures
Rewetting England’s lowland peat could help meet emissions target, says study
Thinktank suggests projects could deliver one-fifth of savings needed from farming, but agriculture experts cast doubt on idea
Rewetting about half of England’s lowland peat would be enough to deliver a fifth of the greenhouse gas emissions savings needed from the country’s farming by 2030, research suggests.
Rewetting peat would also help restore habitats for birds, wildlife and plant species. But farming experts strongly dispute the potential for such projects.
Continue reading...RGGI Market: Lack of momentum leads to quiet week for RGAs
Global tennis tour launches app to enable players to track and offset travel emissions
Canada is on fire, and big oil is the arsonist | Tzeporah Berman
Governments need to represent us, not fossil-fuel profiteers. We need plans to phase out fossil fuel production and emissions
Canada is on fire from coast to coast to coast. Thousands have been evacuated, millions exposed to air pollution, New York a doom orange and even the titans of Wall Street choking.
Catastrophic flooding in Pakistan, back-to-back cyclones in the Pacific islands and droughts in Africa haven’t been enough to create a tipping point for action. Now that climate impacts have hit the economic capital of western power, will it spur governments in the global north to get serious?
Continue reading...EU ministers agree united position on controversial nature restoration law
European new vehicle CO2 emissions drop for third year as EV registrations surge
Euro Markets: Midday Update
UK supermarket supplier’s chickens given antibiotics critical for humans
Investigation of meat sourced by Polish firm that sells frozen poultry to Lidl, Asda and Iceland raises superbug concerns
A major supplier of chicken to UK supermarkets is sourcing birds dosed with antibiotics “critical to human health”, according to a new investigation, as concerns grow about the spread of deadly superbugs.
The Bureau of Investigative Journalism (BIJ) found that the Polish meat business SuperDrob, which sells frozen poultry products to Lidl, Asda and Iceland, is sourcing chicken from farms that use fluoroquinolone antibiotics, classified as “critically important for human health” by the World Health Organization (WHO). Fluoroquinolones are often used to treat serious salmonella infections in humans.
Continue reading...Voluntary carbon firms forge ties to de-risk investments for both sellers and buyers
Debt relief urgent for poor countries hit by climate shocks, says IMF chief
Exclusive: Kristalina Georgieva calls for ‘debt for climate swaps’ ahead of world summit on new global financial pact
Poor countries hit by climate disaster should not be forced to struggle with crippling debt payments, the head of the International Monetary Fund has urged before a global summit on climate finance.
Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the IMF, said providing debt relief to countries suffering from extreme weather was a matter of urgency. Extreme weather is hitting harder around the world, and countries already facing debt mountains cannot afford to service their debts, particularly at a time of high interest rates.
Continue reading...China softens rhetoric on CBAM, though next step remains uncertain -analysts
Australian govt’s nature repair market bill in doubt after Coalition reverses its support
Multilateral development banks roll out Paris-aligned methodological principles
Others debate whether Putin’s attack on Ukraine is genocide. As bombs rain down on us, I have no doubt | Oleksandr Mykhed
It is now clear that Russian forces have no real strategy, only brutal tactics to wipe out a people and a culture
The 468th day of the invasion. Downtown Kyiv. 2am. Over the past 35 days, my wife, Olena, and I have discovered a new way to sleep. Our bodies have become so accustomed to constant night-time air-raid alerts that now we balance on the edge of a deep sleep, which guarantees at least a little rest, and employ special listening techniques throughout the night. The whole body morphs into one big ear. And in a moment, the sound of an approaching rocket will pull us from a heavy slumber.
We don’t need words. As usual, we jump out of bed and in a few leaps fly from the bedroom to the corridor. The two-wall rule creates an illusion of safety. No walls could save us from a direct hit by an Iranian Shahed drone or a Russian missile. However, there is a placebo impression, that at least it will protect us against the blast wave and glass fragments.
Continue reading...Flares of despair: the human costs of Iraq’s oil – in pictures
Pollution and extraction of water are having a huge impact on local communities. High rates of cancer and respiratory problems are the norm, while marshes dry out and fish die in the rivers
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