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Contractor settles with inverter company over solar farm, still in dispute with owners
Solar farm contractor says it has settled its dispute with inverter supplier, which will enable arbitration with project owners to proceed.
The post Contractor settles with inverter company over solar farm, still in dispute with owners appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Ultra-low cost “earth mount” solar innovator lines up first 100MW-plus PV project
US company Erthos says it has signed a memorandum of understanding for a 107MW project with a yet-to-be-disclosed US developer.
The post Ultra-low cost “earth mount” solar innovator lines up first 100MW-plus PV project appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Pressure builds on AGL chair as more proxy advisors side with Cannon-Brookes
Another proxy advisor swings in behind Mike Cannon-Brookes' preferred AGL board nominees, putting renewed pressure on the current chair.
The post Pressure builds on AGL chair as more proxy advisors side with Cannon-Brookes appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Great Solar Business Podcast: Have we hit peak solar?
Live at the All Energy Conference, Nigel chats with Ric Brazalle from Green Energy Trading.
The post Great Solar Business Podcast: Have we hit peak solar? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
CP Daily: Tuesday November 1, 2022
CBA hires fresh senior talent including new carbon boss
UK methane emissions could be cut by 40% by 2030, says thinktank
Green Alliance lists measures that could cut emissions of gas that has 80 times global heating power of CO2
Methane emissions in the UK could be cut by more than 40% by 2030 with a raft of inexpensive policies, according to an environmental thinktank.
The government has pledged to cut emissions of methane, a greenhouse gas that has more than 80 times the global heating power of CO2, by at least 30% by 2030. The move was trumpeted by Boris Johnson when he was prime minister after the UK joined more than 100 other countries to make the pledge at Cop26 in Glasgow.
Continue reading...Forest groups, carbon exchange partner to urge acceptance of HFLD carbon credits
Despite years of exposure to the climate science, I don’t believe we are headed for total societal collapse | Rebecca Huntley
People can seem immune to the news of catastrophic climate breakdown, but that’s a very human response. There is hope
Last Friday the Guardian published a story under the headline “World close to ‘irreversible’ climate breakdown”. This was not a quote from Greta Thunberg or Extinction Rebellion, but the central message from three United Nations agencies.
They found there was “no credible pathway to 1.5C in place” and current pledges for action, even if honoured, would result in global heating of around 2.5C – in other words, a catastrophic climate breakdown, with devastating consequences for societies around the globe.
Continue reading...Longer lasting PV modules promise relief for solar supply chain
New research suggests longer-lived PV modules may be key to reducing the amount of materials and manufacturing needed meet global demand for solar.
The post Longer lasting PV modules promise relief for solar supply chain appeared first on RenewEconomy.
NGOs seek end to EU’s ‘dash for gas’ in Africa as Egypt welcomes climate summit
BlueFloat consortium unveils first 900MW offshore wind farm in New Zealand
BlueFloat and Energy Estate unveil 900MW offshore wind project in New Zealand, the first of 5GW of planned capacity.
The post BlueFloat consortium unveils first 900MW offshore wind farm in New Zealand appeared first on RenewEconomy.
US forest carbon initiative announces programme freeze to address demand imbalance
We all need energy to survive. Here are 3 ways to ensure Australia's crazy power prices leave no-one behind
Boris Johnson confirms he is attending COP27 in Egypt
At least 29 mln REDD credits eligible for backdating with CCB
MPs call for urgent inquiry into Teesside dredging and mass crab deaths
Environment committee chair says crab die-offs in north-east having ‘profound impact on fishing communities’
The chair of the House of Commons environment select committee has called for an urgent investigation into whether dredging around a freeport development in Teesside has caused mass die-offs of crabs on the north-east coast.
In a letter sent on Tuesday, Sir Robert Goodwill told Thérèse Coffey, the environment secretary, his committee had heard evidence that the repeated mass deaths were having a “profound and long-lasting impact … on fishing communities”.
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