Feed aggregator
Foundation backed by Mike Cannon-Brookes invests $10m in bid to cut secondhand electric car cost
Good Car Company plans to run a batch-buy program that would source cars from Japan and the UK
- Get our free news app, morning email briefing or daily news podcast
A philanthropic foundation backed by Mike Cannon-Brookes has invested $10m into Tasmanian startup the Good Car company to help slash the cost of secondhand electric vehicles in Australia.
The announcement from Boundless on Thursday follows months of signalling by Cannon-Brookes that he was prepared to invest large sums into businesses addressing aspects of the carbon transition.
Continue reading...The old men and the CPAC: conservatives regaled with tired tales of climate misinformation | Temperature Check
The Australian conference supposedly devoted to ‘bold action’ from the right spent much of its time pouring scorn on any form of climate action
- Get our free news app, morning email briefing or daily news podcast
Climate science is a fraud, according to one speaker; renewable energy has pushed up electricity prices for Australians and the case that carbon dioxide drives global warming is unproven, according to others.
Those were just some of the themes at last weekend’s annual conference in Sydney of the Conservative Political Action (CPAC) network – billed as the “largest and most prominent conference for conservatives and liberty lovers in Australia”.
Sign up to receive an email with the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning
Continue reading...Fracking: The simple test of whether it should happen or not
According to conventional economic theory, whether or not fracking should occur is simple – and the answer these days is almost always "not."
The post Fracking: The simple test of whether it should happen or not appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Scottish fossil revealed to be pterodactyl ancestor
Critical hydrogen skills shortage could threaten emissions goals
Australia has neither the skilled workers nor the training capacity to achieve its ambitious renewable hydrogen plans, a new report has found.
The post Critical hydrogen skills shortage could threaten emissions goals appeared first on RenewEconomy.
CP Daily: Wednesday October 5, 2022
Siemens Gamesa upgrades onshore wind turbine to 7MW
Spanish wind energy giant has once again expanded its onshore wind turbine offering, upgrading its 5.X platform to offer up to 7MW of rated power.
The post Siemens Gamesa upgrades onshore wind turbine to 7MW appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Space, the unseen frontier in the war in Ukraine
The Driven Podcast: The trucking industry is going electric
We test drive a heavy duty electric truck, and interview key players in an industry that is going electric faster than most people can imagine.
The post The Driven Podcast: The trucking industry is going electric appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Is Australia’s “clean energy” focus adding to its economic and climate problems?
How tunnel vision on switching to renewables is costing Australia dearly by ignoring the vital importance of energy efficiency and productivity.
The post Is Australia’s “clean energy” focus adding to its economic and climate problems? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
EU Market: EUAs ease back after topping €70 amid ‘less bearish’ REPowerEU sale prospects
Toxic air pollution particles found in lungs and brains of unborn babies
Particles breathed by mothers pass to their vulnerable foetuses, with potentially lifelong consequences
Toxic air pollution particles have been found in the lungs, livers and brains of unborn babies, long before they have taken their first breath. Researchers said their “groundbreaking” discovery was “very worrying”, as the gestation period of foetuses is the most vulnerable stage of human development.
Thousands of black carbon particles were found in each cubic millimetre of tissue, which were breathed in by the mother during pregnancy and then passed through the bloodstream and placenta to the foetus.
Continue reading...WCI compliance account transfers in Q3 hit highest level since 2018
VER shortage expected by 2027 in high demand scenario -analysts
Program Associate, RGGI, Inc. – New York City
EU’s von der Leyen backs boost to REPowerEU funding, raising questions about a further ETS raid
Megadroughts helped topple ancient empires. We’ve found their traces in Australia’s past, and expect more to come
Thousands of salmon found dead as Canada drought dries out river
A lack of rain on the western coasts saw 65,000 dead salmon wash up on the creek
Tens of thousands of dead wild salmon scattered along a creek bed are the latest casualty of a drought that has gripped the province of British Columbia for more than a month and left communities bracing for more devastation.
In a video clip posted to social media, the carcasses of pink and chum salmon are seen piled near the community of Bella Bella.
Continue reading...The Guardian view on Cop27: climate justice must take centre stage | Editorial
Richer countries must do far more to help emerging nations cope with the destruction already wreaked by global heating
Speaking to the Guardian last month, Belize’s representative to the UN vividly described the havoc wreaked on his country by global heating. “Loss and damage is already occurring,” said Carlos Fuller. “Severe erosion is altering communities; drought and floods [are] affecting farmers and causing infrastructure damage; [there is] coral bleaching; salt water intrusion is affecting the water supply.” From the catastrophic recent floods in Pakistan to the ongoing drought emergency in Kenya, similarly disastrous impacts are blighting developing nations across the globe. Many lack the economic resources to cope with new climate threats, which are overwhelmingly the consequence of historic carbon emissions by the world’s richest countries.
As the UN secretary-general, António Guterres, stated this week, ahead of November’s Cop27 summit in Egypt, properly addressing this dimension of the climate crisis – the damage already being done – is a “moral imperative that can no longer be ignored”. In Copenhagen in 2009, developed countries pledged to deliver $100bn a year to vulnerable states hit by severe climate-linked impacts.
Continue reading...