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It’s messy and slow and drowned in noise, but a change in Australia’s climate policy is under way | Adam Morton
There is a signal beneath the noise, and it is bigger than just the safeguard mechanism
Climate scientists sometimes talk about moments when the “signal emerges from the noise” – when the human influence on heatwaves and downpours becomes greater than what could have been caused by natural changes alone.
The same might be said for Australia’s reborn attempts to formulate a climate policy. Sometimes the noise that surrounds the debate is so great that it can make the underlying signal about where we’re going hard to find. But the signal is there.
Continue reading...NSW hosts best performing wind farms as market keeps eye on Liddell coal closure
NSW plays host to half of the top ten performing wind farms, all of whom performed better than the Liddell coal generator about to close down.
The post NSW hosts best performing wind farms as market keeps eye on Liddell coal closure appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Ministers treating coastal areas like ‘open sewers’, says Labour
Shadow minister submits bill to curb spills as Environment Agency reveals sewage was dumped for almost 1m hours last year
Ministers have treated coastal communities as if they are “open sewers”, Labour has said, after a damaging analysis of Environment Agency (EA) data revealed sewage was dumped for almost a million hours last year.
In total, the data – which was analysed by the party – shows 141,777 sewage-dumping events occurred across 137 constituencies on the coasts of England and Wales in 2022.
Continue reading...Businesses in north of England ask ministers for help to hit net zero
Leaders of Drax, Siemens and others call for green growth to be a priority and ‘regional disparities’ to be closed
Business leaders in the north of England have written to the prime minister, chancellor and energy secretary asking for help to reach net zero.
Big names including Drax, Siemens, Peel, Manchester airport, the CBI and all 11 local enterprise partnerships (LEPs) in the north signed a letter urging the government to prioritise green growth in the north.
Continue reading...Experts call for stricter air pollution targets to tackle dementia risk
Research links pollution to increased risk of dementia, even at levels below UK, US and EU air quality standards
Exposure to air pollution is linked to an increased risk of dementia, even at levels below UK, US and EU air quality standards, according to research. Experts say the findings add to the need for urgent action to reduce exposure to pollution globally.
More than 57 million people worldwide are living with dementia and the global burden continues to increase. But interventions to delay or prevent the onset of dementia are scarce.
Continue reading...WCI Q1 surplus expands on offset issuances, as allowance glut dwindles
LCFS Market: California prices tick up to 6-week high amid rising financial involvement
Oregon allocates emission permits for second year after winning lawsuit
Pragmatism versus idealism? Behind the split between environmental groups and the Greens on the safeguard mechanism
Flow Power switches on “smart” solar farm with battery storage built on old racecourse
Flow Power says "smart" solar farm on old racecourse is Australia’s first fully operational utility-scale DC-coupled solar and battery system.
The post Flow Power switches on “smart” solar farm with battery storage built on old racecourse appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Voluntary carbon market heading into a storm without an overhaul, panel warns
Dartmoor National Park Authority considers wild camping ban appeal
“Epic moment”: Solar innovator 5B starts on high volume manufacturing line
Australian solar innovator 5B begins construction of its high-volume, scalable, and mostly automated manufacturing and assembly line
The post “Epic moment”: Solar innovator 5B starts on high volume manufacturing line appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Seven Just Stop Oil activists convicted over London road blockade
Judge finds protesters guilty of obstructing highway after incident in South Kensington last October
Seven climate activists who glued themselves to the road outside the Natural History Museum in south-west London have been convicted of obstructing a highway.
Ambulances, buses, delivery vans and a vehicle carrying a 90-year-old in need of medical assistance were caught up in the traffic in Cromwell Road, South Kensington, on 19 October last year.
Continue reading...EU nations agree softer stance on F-gases to tee up talks to finalise bill
European Commission seeks expert advice on EU ETS expansion to buildings, road transport
Vitol’s UK subsidiary to install 349 MW of new ‘flexible’ gas power generation
UPDATE – German court rules against oil firm’s climate neutrality claim, as provider shifts course
Ice sheets can collapse at 600 metres a day, far faster than feared, study finds
Sediments from last ice age provide ‘warning from the past’ for Antarctica and sea level rise today, say scientists
Ice sheets can collapse into the ocean in spurts of up to 600 metres (2,000 feet) a day, a study has found, far faster than recorded before.
Scientists said the finding, based on sea floor sediment formations from the last ice age, was a “warning from the past” for today’s world in which the climate crisis is eroding ice sheets.
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