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COP15: Is ambition on biodiversity dropping with the draft agreement’s bracket count?
COP15: New tool revealed to track finance flows for biodiversity alignment
Dear year 12: you’re starting a career at the end of the world – so why not follow your dreams? | Anna Spargo-Ryan
Every year well-meaning adults tell school students their results don’t matter. I’m taking the longer view …
When I got my VCE results almost one hundred years ago (in 2000), I had two goals: to be imminently drunk, and to do something that would become a “real job”. As the eldest child of university graduates and impressive overachievers, there was no question in my mind of doing anything silly like “something I loved” or “following my dream”.
I wanted to be a writer. Of course I did; I had been writing about my feelings since I was little, and English was the only subject that gave me anything resembling academic pleasure. But writing was, as far as I knew, a pretend job. A good way to spend every month scrounging for coins between couch cushions to put food on the table.
Continue reading...Empty promises of carbon capture usher through decades more coal from the UK
Justifying approvals of a new coal mine with the promise of CCS is like smoking cigarettes and gambling that a cure for cancer will exist by the time you need it.
The post Empty promises of carbon capture usher through decades more coal from the UK appeared first on RenewEconomy.
John Kerry examining likely impact of new UK coalmine
US climate envoy says he will publicly criticise UK’s approval of Cumbrian mine if it adds to emissions
John Kerry, the US climate official, has said he is closely examining the UK government’s approval of a new coalmine, over concerns that it will raise greenhouse gas emissions and send the wrong signal to developing countries.
Kerry, Joe Biden’s special envoy for climate, said he was taking a close interest in the mine, the first to get the go-ahead in the UK for 30 years, and that he would speak out publicly against the approval if it did not meet strict criteria.
Continue reading...Wild campers to protest against landowner’s bid to ban Dartmoor camping
High court will rule next week on challenge brought by Alexander Darwall to remove right to wild camp on moor
Wild campers are planning to hold protests against a landowner’s attempts to outlaw sleeping under the stars on Dartmoor.
Rallies attended by those who camp, and those who support the right to, will take place on Dartmoor on Saturday and outside the high court in London on Monday to express fierce public opposition to an attempt to legally overturn the right to camp in Dartmoor national park.
Continue reading...Australia’s mountain mist frog declared extinct as red list reveals scale of biodiversity crisis
Experts describe it as a ‘beautiful endemic rainforest species’, one of several that have not been seen for decades
- Marine life hit by ‘perfect storm’ as red list reveals species close to extinction
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The mountain mist frog, a species once found across two-thirds of Australia’s wet tropics, has been declared extinct on the International Union for Conservation of Nature red list.
The last recorded sighting of the frog, most commonly found near Thornton Peak, north-west of Cairns, was in April 1990. It is believed to have been wiped out by chytrid fungus, a disease that attacks the skin and has destroyed amphibian populations across the globe, though a reduction in its natural habitat due to rising temperatures driven by greenhouse gas emissions may have also played a role.
Continue reading...CP Daily: Friday December 9, 2022
Biodiversity: What is a mass extinction and are we causing one?
Rebalancing, contract rolls frame weekly changes in CCA, RGGI holdings
California industrial carbon allowance allocations tick up for 2023
Gold Standard cites “unjustifiable” UK offsetting claims for new coal mine
COMMENT: Sweep’s climate tech & business predictions for 2023
Senior Program Officer, Carbon, GGGI – Vientiane
French bank launches exchange-traded commodity contract to track EU carbon
Canada meets pledge to end international fossil fuel subsidies
Euro Markets: EUAs slip but still notch 3.1% weekly gain despite ‘fragility’
EU approves funding for cross-border energy infrastructure, including CCS
UPDATE – RGGI Q4 auction clears at lowest level since last September
Marine life hit by ‘perfect storm’ as red list reveals species close to extinction
Unsustainable human activity putting dugongs, abalone shellfish and pillar coral at risk of disappearing, says latest IUCN update
Illegal and unsustainable fishing, fossil fuel exploration, the climate crisis and disease are pushing marine species to the brink of extinction, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) red list, with populations of dugongs, abalone shellfish and pillar coral at risk of disappearing for ever.
Marine life is facing a “perfect storm” of human overconsumption, threatening the survival of some of the world’s most expensive seafood, according to the conservation organisation, which publishes the most up-to-date information on the health of wildlife populations on Earth.
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