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COP27: Turkey to bid to host COP31, Czechia and Brazil reported to seek 2024-25 climate summits

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2022-11-15 20:39
Turkey has emerged as a bidder for to host the COP31 global climate summit, putting up a challenge to Australia and the Pacific Islands, which were thought to have been the sole contender to hold the talks in 2026 up until now, while Czechia and Brazil are reported to be respective candidates for COP29 and 30.
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China issues sectoral guidelines for non-ferrous metals to peak emissions by 2030

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2022-11-15 20:34
China has published a roadmap for its non-ferrous metals sector to top out carbon emissions by 2030, making the ETS-destined industry the latest in a growing line of similar sectoral guidelines.
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Australia Market Roundup: Regulator approves 11 soil carbon projects as ACCU prices climb

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2022-11-15 20:07
Australia’s Clean Energy Regulator has approved 13 new offset projects, most of them soil carbon schemes, as Australian Carbon Credits Unit (ACCU) prices gather momentum amid an uptick in buying interest and record volume.
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It should not be controversial to say a population of 8 billion will have a grave impact on the climate | John Vidal

The Guardian - Tue, 2022-11-15 20:00

It’s time to ditch the generations-long argument between those who blame overpopulation and those who worry about consumption

  • John Vidal is a former Guardian environment editor

By a remarkable coincidence, just as governments, campaigners and business owners are meeting in Egypt to address climate breakdown today, the world is officially crashing past the symbolic 8 billion population milestone . This means global population is on its way to 10 billion or more by the turn of the century.

But there will be no attempt by countries at Cop27 to connect the inexorable growth of human numbers with the seemingly unstoppable rise in temperatures. Despite the fact that the several billion more people expected to be alive in 70 years’ time will put more pressure on resources and will produce far more emissions, the population explosion is yet again being ignored, sidestepped or denied by world leaders.

John Vidal was the Guardian’s environment editor. He is the author of McLibel: Burger Culture on Trial

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Cop27: news organisations around the world join call for climate justice – live

The Guardian - Tue, 2022-11-15 19:36

A joint editorial published by the Guardian and more than 30 partners calls for rich countries to pay their fair share towards solving the climate crisis

It’s only Tuesday but the end of the climate summit is rapidly approaching. Governments are focused on the final political agreement that will come out of Egypt. Every word matters and as we saw at the end of Cop26 last year, arguments in the final few hours can come down to whether the text includes “phase out” or “phase down” in a particular clause. Ministers arrived over the weekend in anticipation of the final tussle over wording. The role of 1.5C, finance, and loss and damage are understood to be the key dividing points.

Carbon Brief’s senior policy editor Simon Evans has a useful thread on what we might expect from the first draft of the cover decision.

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China thermal power generation increases in October, despite slower power demand growth

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2022-11-15 17:53
China’s thermal power generation in October was up by 3.2% from a year ago, outpacing a 1.3% gain in overall power output, government data showed Tuesday, though the country's power demand grew at a slower pace amid gradual economic recovery.
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NZ Market: NZUs rise to new record high on bullish expectations for govt decision

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2022-11-15 17:37
New Zealand carbon allowances have traded at an all-time high over the past two days amid persisting expectations that the government will agree to ETS recommendations made by the independent Climate Change Commission (CCC).
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Only official bathing spot on Thames fails tests for bacteria linked to sewage

The Guardian - Tue, 2022-11-15 17:00

Data shows E coli and intestinal enterococci at levels unsafe for swimming at Wolvercote Mill Stream, near Oxford

The only official bathing water area on the River Thames has failed tests for bacteria associated with sewage pollution, data shows.

A section of Wolvercote Mill Stream, at Port Meadow, two miles outside Oxford, was designated as an official bathing area in April after a campaign by local people.

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Water firms may owe UK customers £163m for spillages, say experts

The Guardian - Tue, 2022-11-15 17:00

Exclusive: Raw sewage releases exploit ‘monopoly’ of suppliers, argue corporate wrongdoing specialists

Water companies could be forced to pay their customers hundreds of millions in fines due to sewage pollution, a leading firm specialising in corporate wrongdoing has said.

Fideres LLP, which has conducted investigations into issues ranging from Covid test prices to cryptocurrency scams, is now setting its sights on England’s water companies.

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Most global coal use covered by net zero pledges but policy action needed to guarantee transition, IEA says

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2022-11-15 16:09
Almost all global coal consumption is now in countries that have committed to a net zero target, but use of the fuel has been stable at near record highs for a decade and immediate policy action is required to mobilise the financing necessary to kickstart a transition to clean energy alternatives worldwide, the International Energy Agency (IEA) urged on Tuesday.
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Victoria needs a plan to get off gas, not an impossible promise to burn more

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2022-11-15 16:06

Australia's emissions jumped higher in 2021, despite strong growth in renewables.Victoria Coalition leader Matthew Guy's campaign promise to "turbocharge" gas production can only be described as a hoax.

The post Victoria needs a plan to get off gas, not an impossible promise to burn more appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Spate of attacks on birds of prey in 2021, RSPB report reveals

The Guardian - Tue, 2022-11-15 16:00

England’s tally of 80 confirmed incidents is second-highest figure since records began

There were 108 confirmed incidents of illegal persecution of birds of prey across Britain in 2021, according to the RSPB’s annual bird crime report.

England’s tally of 80 confirmed persecution incidents was the second-highest figure since records began in 1990, after an unprecedented surge in wildlife crime during the pandemic year of 2020. That year, a record 137 known incidents of bird of prey persecution were logged by the RSPB, with lockdowns seemingly creating an increased opportunity to kill raptors without detection.

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Impose climate tax on fossil fuel giants, media groups urge

The Guardian - Tue, 2022-11-15 16:00

The Guardian and dozens of international media titles publish a joint editorial calling for radical thinking on how to fund climate action in poorer countries

Dozens of media organisations from around the world have published a joint editorial article calling for a windfall tax on the biggest fossil fuel companies.

The funds raised should be redistributed to poorer, vulnerable countries, the editorial says, as they are suffering the worst impacts of the climate crisis despite having done the least to cause it.

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The Guardian view on Cop27: this is no time for apathy or complacency | Editorial

The Guardian - Tue, 2022-11-15 16:00

This editorial calling for action from world leaders on the climate crisis is published today by more than 30 media organisations in more than 20 countries

Climate change is a global problem that requires cooperation between all nations. That’s why today more than 30 newspapers and media organisations in more than 20 countries have taken a common view about what needs to be done. Time is running out. Rather than getting out of fossil fuels and into clean energy, many wealthy nations are reinvesting in oil and gas, failing to cut emissions fast enough and haggling over the aid they are prepared to send to poor countries. All this while the planet hurtles towards the point of no return – where climate chaos becomes irreversible.

Since the Cop26 UN climate summit in Glasgow 12 months ago, countries have only promised to do one-fiftieth of what is needed to stay on track to keep temperatures within 1.5C of pre-industrial levels. No continent has avoided extreme weather disasters this year – from floods in Pakistan to heatwaves in Europe, and from forest fires in Australia to hurricanes in the US. Given that these came about from elevated temperatures of about 1.1C, the world can expect far worse to come.

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‘Everything has changed, nothing has changed’: what’s stopping green energy

The Guardian - Tue, 2022-11-15 16:00

The case for rapid transition to renewables is stronger, but some developments are making it harder

On a breezy day in May, the Met Office issued a pithy forecast which would prove telling: “Quite windy.” In fact, on 25 May the UK set a record for wind power generation, 19.9 gigawatts – enough to cover more than half of Britain’s electricity needs, or boil 3.5m kettles. So plentiful was the wind power that National Grid was forced to ask some turbines in the west of Scotland to shut down, as the network was unable to store such a large amount of electricity.

The episode represents a landmark which underlines both the progress of Britain’s renewables industry and the potholes in the road to replacing fossil fuels. Just six months earlier, global leaders met in Glasgow with renewable energy high on the agenda.

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You are now one of 8 billion humans alive today. Let's talk overpopulation – and why low income countries aren't the issue

The Conversation - Tue, 2022-11-15 15:39
For many environmentalists, overpopulation is a real concern. But the planet will benefit more from tackling overconsumption by rich countries. Matthew Selinske, Postdoctoral research associate conservation science, RMIT University Leejiah Dorward, Postdoctoral research associate, Bangor University Paul Barnes, Visiting researcher, UCL Stephanie Brittain, Conservation scientist, University of Oxford Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Cannon-Brookes wins board battle, but AGL chair still convinced lights will go out in 1.5° scenario

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2022-11-15 14:40

AGL now has four new directors who support a rapid green transition, but the company chair is still convinced the lights will go out if we keep to the Paris target.

The post Cannon-Brookes wins board battle, but AGL chair still convinced lights will go out in 1.5° scenario appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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“Once in a generation:” Gladstone plans pivot from fossil fuels to renewables in Australia first

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2022-11-15 14:13

Port city releases landmark report that provides plan to transition away from fossil fuel-based industries and into the 'new economy'.

The post “Once in a generation:” Gladstone plans pivot from fossil fuels to renewables in Australia first appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Victoria Labor pledges $6m to expand wind energy training facility

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2022-11-15 13:18

Labor pledges $6m to support the expansion of a state-of-the-art education centre to train workers in skills essential to the renewables transition.

The post Victoria Labor pledges $6m to expand wind energy training facility appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Sun Cable signs up to help unlock $150 billion of green growth in Indonesia

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2022-11-15 13:00

sun cable 5b solar northern territory optimisedSun Cable strikes deal with Indonesia government to pursue more than $150 billion of green industry opportunities in the archipelago.

The post Sun Cable signs up to help unlock $150 billion of green growth in Indonesia appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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